Gold News

Gold Prices Sink Sub-$1300 on US Jobs Data Surprise, Bond Yields Spike to "Fed Taper" Levels

GOLD PRICES slumped $20 per ounce in 10 minutes Friday lunchtime in London, as the Dollar rose after much stronger than expected US jobs data.
 
Non-farm payrolls added 204,000 jobs net in October, the Bureau for Labor Statistics said, beating analysts' lowest prediction in a year of 125,000.
 
Dropping 2% from last Friday's finish, Dollar gold prices hit their lowest level since 17th October at $1292 per ounce.
 
Silver also fell to a 3-week low, losing 35c per ounce to hit the $21.44 level seen yesterday.
 
"The bar [was] set low," said a note on commodity and gold prices from Standard Bank just before the jobs data.
 
"If the outcome is better than consensus, we would expect gold, and other precious metals, to come under pressure."
 
World stock markets extended the day's drop, as did commodities.
 
German Bunds and other European debt prices fell, while US Treasury bonds fell so fast in price, the annual yield offered by 10-year debt jumped 13 basis points to 2.73%.
 
That's the highest level in 7 weeks, since just before the US central bank surprised the markets by choosing not to "taper" the Fed's quantitative easing of $85 billion per month in asset purchases.
 
"Clearly the $1350 [level] didn't want to hold" in gold prices, says one London market-maker's trading desk in a note, "[because] miners got busy selling production forward up there."
 
Australian gold miner St.Barbara said yesterday it has sold forward 7.5 tonnes of future production at a price of $1390 per ounce.
 
Small West-African producer Amara Mining this week sold 20% of its shares to a wealth management investor.
 
This year's slump in world gold prices will cap the rise in world mining output from 2015, said a report this week from consultants MetalsFocus.
 
"With this [forward selling] in mind," that London trading desk's note goes on, "we can't really think gold will spike easily through $1350", which it now sees as a key level.
 
"Only longer-term holders shall be enticed to buy more gold while it's cheap. [But] at some point gold will catch up, strongly."
 
Meantime, "Gold faces downside risk in the near term," says a technical analysis from Barclays Capital.
 
"Although a small bid unfolds when priced in Euros, resistance near €1000 per ounce is a tough barrier."
 
Gold prices for Euro investors also fell on Friday's US jobs data, but less dramatically with a 1.3% drop.
 
One day after the European Central Bank cut its key lending rate to a new record low of 0.25%, the International Monetary Fund today urged newest Eurozone member Slovenia to recapitalize its banking sector "immediately".
 
Credit ratings agency Standard & Poor's meantime cut its long-term rating on France's sovereign debt from AA+ to AA, pointing to high unemployment and weak reforms by the government.
 
Further ahead, and pointing to $1295 as a key level for gold prices, "Janet Yellen’s confirmation hearings [for the top job at the US Federal Reserve] are likely the next key event [to] have a direct impact on gold," reckons a note from Swiss investment bank and London bullion market-makers Credit Suisse.
 
"Given the market’s image of her as an uber-dove [favoring low rates and more QE] she is more likely than not to come across less dovish than expected during her testimony."

Adrian Ash

Adrian Ash, BullionVault Gold News

Adrian Ash is director of research at BullionVault, the world-leading physical gold, silver and platinum market for private investors online. Formerly head of editorial at London's top publisher of private-investment advice, he was City correspondent for The Daily Reckoning from 2003 to 2008, and he has now been researching and writing daily analysis of precious metals and the wider financial markets for over 20 years. A frequent guest on BBC radio and television, Adrian is regularly quoted by the Financial Times, MarketWatch and many other respected news outlets, and his views from inside the bullion market have been sought by the Economist magazine, CNBC, Bloomberg, Germany's Handelsblatt and FAZ, plus Italy's Il Sole 24 Ore.

See the full archive of Adrian Ash articles on GoldNews.

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