Gold tumbles again, could see worst week in 30 years
Saturday, 22 June 2013 05:37
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Reuters: Gold fell to a three-year low on Friday and was in danger of recording its biggest weekly drop in 30 years after the US Federal Reserve said it would wind down its bullion-friendly stimulus later this year.
Spot gold – down nearly 9% this week – dropped for the fifth straight session, while Comex gold futures also declined over 1% to their lowest in three years.
Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said on Wednesday the Central Bank would taper its $85 billion monthly bond buying program as the US economy was recovering strongly, ending purchases around mid-2014 if economic growth held up.
“What the market is undergoing now is a state of normalisation, going back to pre-stimulus times,” said Joyce Liu, investment analyst at Phillip Futures in Singapore. “Since the first stimulus program in 2009, markets have jumped despite fundamentals not justifying such a spike.”
Gold was also hurt by CME Group Inc’s move to raise initial margins for Comex gold after prices plunged over 6% on Thursday.
The exchange operator raised Comex 100 Gold Futures initial margins for speculators by 25% to $8,800 per contract from $7,040.
“That is definitely affecting gold too. For those who cannot put out margin calls on time, they will be squeezed out even when they don’t want to get out,” said Liu.
Until recently, gold – seen as a hedge against inflation – had gained as the global economy took a hit and central banks acted to boost their economies. Gold touched an all-time high of $1,920.30 in 2011.
Spot gold was down 0.5% at $1,271.16 an ounce by 0121 GMT on Friday. The metal fell to $1,269.04 earlier – its lowest since September 2010 and a level which would mark the worst weekly decline in 30 years.
It has lost 24% of its value this year, after recording 12 years of gains.
Gold is on weak technical ground and will fall below $1,200 an ounce before finding support, technical analysts said.
UBS lowered its 2013 gold price outlook by 10 percent to $1,440 an ounce, and its 2014 forecast to $1,325 an ounce from $1,625.
SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, said its holdings fell 0.42% to 995.35 tons on Thursday – the lowest in more than four years.
But the drop in prices could see a spurt in physical demand in top consumers India and China, which have been quiet recently.
However, Liu said the demand would not be as strong as April when gold prices fell the most in 30 years over just two days.