Feb 04

Price of Gold Weekly Recap – January 28-February 1, 2013

Monday Open: $1,654.50
Weekly High: $1,681.90
Weekly Low: $1,654.50
Friday Close: $1,667.90

It was a good week for gold after many U.S. economic reports and the Federal Reserve’s regular meeting concurred that the U.S. economy is not yet in a state of repair strong enough to push down gold. Following a bearish decline from last week, this week closed on a higher note than it opened.

Monday started off sluggish, a little flat on a relatively strong dollar. Most of Monday was spent in anticipation of news to come later in the week. Tuesday rallied a little bit as the dollar sunk slightly, and a Consumer Confidence report revealed worse than expected economic data – a 58.6 rating, well below the 64.0 expected mark.

Wednesday was the real day of growth for gold this week. The price of gold was bolstered by the Federal Reserve’s FOMC meeting, in which Chairman Ben Bernanke reiterated the low interest rates and bond-buying program that was set in motion at the end of last year. Concerns have arisen lately that the Fed might pull back on their quantitative easing should the economy show considerable improvement, but the U.S. GDP report released this week showed that the country’s economy had actually contracted 0.1% in the fourth quarter of 2012. Bernanke confirmed that interest rates would remain negligible until unemployment hits 6.5%.

Unfortunately for gold, the yellow metal gave back all its gains on Thursday, despite bullish factors in the marketplace like a weak dollar and poor economic data. Though no one single external factor can be pinpointed for this loss, the drop was probably due to profit-taking from short-term traders.

Friday saw a continued release of negative U.S. economic data, which gave a small spike to the price of gold. The U.S. jobless claims report missed their mark by 38,000, ticking the unemployment rate up to 7.9%. However, later in the day a stronger manufacturing report was released, undoing many of the slight gains that had occurred earlier in the day.

Next week, gold is predicted to stay in the $1,650 to $1,700 range, with the European Central Bank meeting on traders’ radar.

Dec 14

Price of Gold Weekly Recap – December 10-14, 2012

Monday Open: $1,711.90
Weekly High: $1,722.00
Weekly Low: $1,692.90
Friday Close: $1,696.30

The big news in gold trading this week was the two-day FOMC conference, economic reports for major world economies, and an automatic trading sell-off in Asian trading. The FOMC conference spiked prices on Wednesday, then sell-off sprees dropped the price for almost no reason on Thursday. Speculation abounds about whether gold has reached its limit as we head into 2013.

Monday was relatively quiet, and not much trading occurred after President Obama and House Speaker Boehner met face to face on Sunday to discuss the fiscal cliff crisis. Traders in all sectors are worried what will or won’t happen before the end of the year, and the fiscal cliff still tends to bring all commodities sectors down, but nothing new brought any light to the situation. The OECD released a report that projected that economies of the U.S., the U.K and China will grow over 2013, but that those of the European Union, Japan and Canada are expected to contract. If world economies are bouncing back, this could be a bearish factor for gold.

Yet, gold responded positively to the news from Tuesday and Wednesday’s FOMC meetings that the Federal Reserve plans to keep interest rates low for approximately the next three years, or until unemployment reaches 6.5%.  The meeting discussed the end of “Operation Twist,” and the beginning of a new bond-buying program, which will entail buying $45 billion of Treasury bonds. The price of gold rose almost $9 on Wednesday.

Yet, Thursday saw some unexpected drops from that high, as Asian trading enacted some automatic sell-stops, which forces selling once a price reaches a certain point. This same trend happened a few weeks ago, for no logical reason, adding an unpredictable factor to gold trading.

The European Union, meanwhile, reached an agreement to appoint a single bank supervisor and EU banking union, which will be a positive sign for their economic recovery. Friday stayed at the low end of the sell-off range to close the week slightly below $1,700.

Gold is undoubtedly a volatile investment at this point in time, and some predict bearish futures for gold, citing that the precious metal is nearing the end of its decade-long streak, but others retain that with the world’s biggest economies still in flux and in the midst of inflation, gold is still a safe hedge fund. Goldman Sachs predicted the end of the gold, while Morgan Stanley credited gold as the “best commodity for 2013.”