Gold Silver Reports — Europeans are paying the least in six months to buy gold as the euro climbs amid speculation the European Central Bank is poised to withdraw unprecedented monetary stimulus.
- 1 Gold touched 1087.01 euros on Thursday, the lowest since December, as the shared currency climbed to 13-month highs against the dollar. While a lower greenback usually fuels demand for bullion, gold has slipped this week after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi said the reflation of the euro-area economy creates room to pull back monetary stimulus. That sent yields higher, damping the allure of non-interest bearing bullion.
- 1.1 The market thinks the ECB “may be concluding quantitative easing, and maybe we could be at a low point as far as the bottom of a cycle,” Phil Streible, a senior market strategist at RJO Futures in Chicago, said in a telephone interview. We could also see economic growth and higher rates in the region, he said. Gold will continue to trade in the $1,240 to $1,260 range, according to Streible.
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Gold priced in euros is down more than 10 percent from its 2017 peak in April. Bullion is being kept in check by record-high equity prices and higher U.S. bond yields, which point to rising risk appetite, analysts at Commerzbank AG said in a report Thursday.
The market thinks the ECB “may be concluding quantitative easing, and maybe we could be at a low point as far as the bottom of a cycle,” Phil Streible, a senior market strategist at RJO Futures in Chicago, said in a telephone interview. We could also see economic growth and higher rates in the region, he said. Gold will continue to trade in the $1,240 to $1,260 range, according to Streible.
Gold futures for August delivery, priced in dollars, fell 0.3 percent to settle at $1,245.80 an ounce at 1:38 p.m on the Comex in New York, the first drop in three days.
In other metals:
Silver futures for September delivery slid 0.8 percent to $16.654 an ounce on the Comex.
Platinum for October delivery dropped 0.1 percent on the New York Mercantile
Exchange, while the September palladium contract fell 1 percent.