Bullion rose to a record for a second straight day, as investors bought gold as a hedge against economic uncertainty after Standard & Poor’s on Monday revised the credit outlook of the US to negative from stable.
“It’s follow-through buying from yesterday after the market had absorbed an initial bout of profit-taking. The recovery of oil prices and the euro have combined to take gold to the $1,500 level,” said James Steel, chief commodity analyst of HSBC.
US gold futures for June delivery rose 60 cents to $1,493.50 by 12:30pm EDT (1630 GMT), having earlier hit a
record $1,500.50 an ounce. Spot gold was down 0.2 percent at $1,492.44 an ounce, bouncing off a high of $1,499.31.
Risky assets were hit by a double-whammy on Monday after fears mounted that Greece will have to restructure its debt, maybe as early as this summer, and S&P threatened to cut the United States’ AAA credit rating.
Silver also set a 31-year high of $43.79 an ounce, and was later up 0.4 percent at $43.49 an ounce.
Silver has outperformed gold this year, up more than 40 percent so far against gold’s 5 percent rise. The gold/silver ratio slipped to a 28-year low below 35 on Monday.
Among other precious metals, platinum slipped 0.4 percent to $1,764.74 an ounce, while palladium dropped 1.5
percent to $728.47.
Gold futures hit record above $1,500/oz
Publication Date:
Wed, 2011-04-20 01:05
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