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Tuesday, January 06, 2009

Bullion metals turn pale


Strong dollar lays its fingerprint on precious metals

Bullion metal prices ended lower on Monday, 05 January, 2009 due to the strong dollar. Generally, a stronger dollar pressures demand for dollar-denominated commodities, such as crude oil and gold, which become more expensive for holders of other currencies and also vice versa.

On Monday, Comex Gold for February delivery fell $21.7 (2.5%) to close at $857.8 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange. It fell to a low of $843.5 during intra day trading. Last week, gold prices gained 1%. On 17 March, 2008 prices had skyrocketed to a high of $1,034/ounce. But prices have dropped significantly (15%) since then.

In 2008, gold prices ended higher by 5.5%. The dollar index has gained 12% that year. In the last quarter, gold prices ended marginally higher by 0.6%. For the third quarter ended September, 2008, gold prices ended lower by 5.1%. It was the first quarterly loss for the yellow metal since the second quarter in FY 2007. Prior to that, the yellow metal ended second quarter with a marginal gain of 0.7%. For first quarter prices gained 10.7%.

On Monday, Comex silver futures for March delivery fell 1.9% to $11.29 an ounce. Last week, silver has gained 9%. For 2008, silver lost 24%.

At the currency market on Monday, the dollar was up against most major counterparts. The dollar index gained 1%.

In the crude market on Monday, crude futures went higher. Crude for February delivery ended up $2.47 or 5.3%, at $48.81 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Last year, the weakening dollar and higher global demand for raw materials had led to records for commodities including gold. Gold reached a record in March 2008 as a U.S. housing slump and credit crisis spurred the Federal Reserve to slash borrowing costs. In the last move, the Federal Reserve has cuts its target bank lending rate to 0.25% from 5.25% in September, 2007. The Fed did it in nine steps.

Prior to 2008, gold had witnessed the greatest annual gain in twenty eight years by gaining $200/ounce (31%) in FY 2007 as lower interest rates had sent the dollar tumbling, and crude-oil prices rose to a record. Silver had climbed 16% in FY 2007. In 2006, silver had jumped 46% while gold gained 23%.

At the MCX, gold prices for February delivery closed lower by Rs 227 (1.7%) at Rs 13,329 per 10 grams. Prices rose to a high of Rs 13,548 per 10 grams and fell to a low of Rs 13,185 per 10 grams during the day's trading.

At the MCX, silver prices for March delivery closed Rs 284 (1.5%) lower at Rs 18,362/Kg. Prices opened at Rs 18,572/kg and fell to a low of Rs 17,627/Kg during the day's trading.