Monday, November 24, 2008

Gold prices climb due to global economic slump: Karvy Comtrade

Gold prices traded in the range of $729.6-$802.8 a troy ounce, as the firmer US dollar propelled a volatile movement in the precious metals sector. The slump in equities in conjunction to the deepening crisis has eroded the investor confidence, thereby proving negative for the precious metals. The price of crude oil dropping below $49 a barrel renewed speculation that a global recession will cut demand for precious metals and raw materials. The dollar rose against the euro as prices paid to U.S. producers plunged and homebuilder confidence fell, increasing demand for the safety of government debt indicted by the substantial increase in TIC flows.

However, prices erased earlier losses and moved higher on speculation the Federal Reserve will lower interest rates to stimulate the U.S. economy, boosting the appeal of the precious metal as an alternative asset. The yield on two-year Treasury notes dropped below 1 percent for the first time ever on bets the Fed will cut its benchmark rate next month. The poor housing sector performance, steep increase in jobless claims and contracting manufacturing activity helped gold prices to move higher. On the weekend, gold prices climbed as the global economic slump dragged down asset prices and boosted the appeal of the precious metal as a store of value.

According to the world gold council, the demand for the precious metal increased 18 % in the third quarter as lower prices encouraged purchases by jewelers and as investors sought a haven from the credit crisis. So-called identifiable investment, which includes purchases through exchange-traded funds and of bars and coins, climbed 56 % to 382.1 tons during the quarter.

Other precious metals, which have wider industrial applications than gold, fell on concern that a global recession may damp demand for all commodities. The International Monetary Fund projected that economies in the U.S., Japan and the euro zone will all shrink in 2009.

This week, fundamentally we expect gold prices to trade sideways amid lower US GDP growth (P), declining home sales and durable goods orders. The gains are likely to be limited by the strengthening dollar and poor economic condition in euro-zone.

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