Gold prices advance on rising physical demand, mixed U.S. data
Investing.com - Gold
prices posted hefty gains on Friday on reports that physical demand is picking
up, while uncertainty over the fate of monetary stimulus programs in the U.S.
bolstered the precious metal's safe haven appeal.
On the Comex
division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for December
delivery traded at USD1,378.40 during U.S. afternoon hours, up 1.29%.
Gold prices hit a
session low of USD1,357.10 a troy ounce and high of USD1,379.10 a troy ounce.
The December
contract settled up 2.06% at USD1,360.90 a troy ounce on Thursday.
Gold futures were
likely to find support at USD1,315.40 a troy ounce, Wednesday's low, and
resistance at USD1,391.35, the high from June 17.
Reports that
physical demand for gold is on the rise in Asia bolstered prices on Friday amid
technical buying.
Elsewhere a mixed
bag of U.S. economic indicators began to fuel sentiments that the U.S. economy
is recovery but at a sluggish clip, and an eventual Federal Reserve decision to
begin tapering monetary stimulus measures will take place so gradually that
gold will still enjoy monetary support for the long term.
Monetary stimulus
programs such as the Fed's USD85 billion in monthly asset purchases tend to
weaken the dollar by driving down long-term interest rates, which makes gold an
attractive venue as long as such tools remain in place even if at a lesser
amount.
Gold and the dollar
tend to trade inversely from one another.
The Commerce
Department reported earlier that U.S. building permits rose 2.7% to 943,000
units in July, just shy of expectations for a 2.9% increase to 945,000 units
although June's figure was revised up to 918,000 units from 911,000.
The government
added that housing starts rose 5.9% to 896,000 units in July, missing
expectations for a 8.3% increase to 900,000 units. Still, June's figure was
revised up to 846,000 units from 836,000.
Elsewhere, the
Thomson Reuters/University of Michigan's preliminary consumer sentiment index
fell to 80.0 in August from 85.1 in July. Analysts were expecting the index to
rise to 85.5 this month.
Not all U.S. data
missed expectations.
The Bureau of Labor
Statistics said in a preliminary report that nonfarm productivity rose 0.9% in
the second quarter, beating expectations for a 0.6% gain after a 1.7% decline
in the previous quarter.
Also on the Comex,
silver for September delivery was up 1.57% at USD23.295 a troy ounce, while
copper for September delivery was up 0.82% and trading at USD3.365 a pound.
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