Jul 08

Price of Gold Weekly Recap – July 1-5 2013

Monday Open: $1,252.60
Weekly High: $1,263.00
Weekly Low: $1,209.80
Friday Close: $1,222.20

Gold continued its downward streak this week, but not without a little momentum upwards first. Monday opened the week on a sharp rally as traders jumped in to take advantage of some short covering from last week’s dramatic losses. The first day of the week hit the week’s high, and if the price would have continued upwards after that, it might have been a sign that gold would have hit its bottom, but Tuesday marked another decline.

The bargain hunting from Monday gave way to a strong selling pressure on Tuesday as the U.S. dollar pushed up to a four-week high. The U.S. dollar and the Federal Reserve’s plan to soon pull back on their quantitative easing program seem to be the major indicators of a continued loss for gold. As the U.S. economy improves, the yellow metal suffers losses as a hedge fund as traders venture into different territory.

Traders are also watching the political situation in Egypt, and the price of gold meandered a little higher by the end of Tuesday. If the crisis in Cairo reaches critical mass, gold could become desirable once again as a safe haven. China is also in gold news, as physical demand for gold seems to be petering off.

Markets went virtually unchanged Thursday, as U.S. trading took a pause on July 4th for the Independence Day holiday. Wednesday showed an equal amount of inaction as many traders started celebrating early.

Friday saw gold take a drop as significantly positive U.S. unemployment data rolled in. The unemployment report was very strong, marking an increase of 195,000 new jobs during the month of June, when only 155,000 to 166,000 were expected. The negative spin on a recovering economy is a lackluster performance from gold. However, analysts predict that even this news isn’t enough to push the Fed to start their tapering program right away, and put expectations for a start date around October.

Next week, focus will be on next moves from the Federal Reserve.