18 Nov 2004 17:41
18.11.2004 17:36:57 Gold knackt 445-Dollar-Marke - Späte Verluste mit Dollarerholung
London, 18. Nov (Reuters) - Gold hat am Donnerstag zum fünften Mal in Folge ein neues 16-Jahre-Hoch erreicht, den Handel in Europa dann aber schwächer beendet. Die Rally der Anleger in das gelbe Metall sei abermals dem einbrechenden Dollar zuzuschreiben, der die Bedeutung des Goldes als alternative Investmentform unterstreiche, sagten Händler.
Den neuen Höchststand erreichte Gold im europäischen Handel bei 445,90 Dollar je Feinunze. Danach verlor es parallel zur leichten Erholung der US-Devise wieder und notierte gegen Handelsschluss bei 440,35/441,10 Dollar nach 444,25/445,00 Dollar am Vortag. Das Londoner Fixing erfolgte am Nachmittag bei 442,00 Dollar und am Vormittag bei 444,30 Dollar. Am Dienstagnachmittag war Gold mit 443,45 Dollar gefixt worden.
Nach Aussage von Händler könnte Gold in absehbarer Zeit die Marke von 450 Dollar knacken, da die USA nach einhelliger Marktmeinung ihr enormes Doppeldefizit zumindest teilweise über eine weitere Dollarabwertung finanzieren würden. Vom bevorstehenden Treffen der Finanzminister und Notenbankchefs der wichtigsten 20 Industrieländer (G-20) am Freitag in Berlin werden keine Aktionen oder Impulse erwartet. Im Vorfeld bezeichnete US-Finanzminister John Snow Devisenmarktintervention als "bestenfalls nicht lohnend".
Während der beiden Ölpreis-Schocks 1973 und 1979 war Gold in Folge des Dollar-Verfalls bis auf 850 Dollar im Januar 1980 gestiegen.
Eine Schweizer Grossbank gab den Gold-Kilopreis mit 16.433/16.683 (Vorabend 16.519/16.769) sfr an.
pma/par
18 Nov 2004 17:47
18.11.2004 17:29:50 NY gold retreats from 16-yr peak on profit-taking
NEW YORK, Nov 18 (Reuters) - U.S. gold futures fell from a 16-1/4-year peak on Thursday as traders took profits from a rally above $445 an ounce amid a softer euro against the dollar and after a new much-hyped gold security launched in New York.
December delivery gold slipped $3.50 to $441.60 an ounce at 10:49 a.m. (1549 GMT) on the New York Mercantile Exchange's COMEX division, in a range between $440.20 and its overnight high at $446.40, which was futures' highest price since July 1988.
"We're seeing a reasonable amount of liquidation here," a gold trader at a bank said.
Dealers previously had been positioning themselves in front of the launch on Thursday of bullion-backed exchange-traded fund streetTRACKS Gold Shares on the New York Stock Exchange.
"I think a lot of people are saying, 'gosh, this price is so high. Why is everybody going to jump into gold at this stage,'" said the trader.
StreetTRACKS, the first gold exchange-traded fund in the United States, listed Thursday under stock symbol GLD . It is designed to track the price of gold and trade like any common stock on the exchange.
Gold also got bit by the dollar's rise from an all-time low against the euro at $1.3074 on profit-taking in the euro and a report showing lower U.S. weekly jobless claims.
"We're a little weaker off the spot (price) and the economic data encouraged a little bit of buying in the dollar," said AG Edwards commodity commentator James Quinn.
The firmer dollar, as well as gold's resistance up at the $444-$445 level and a top-heavy speculative net long position in COMEX futures, all combined to fuel the selling, he said.
"Open interest is very much one-sided, and I think you're going to see a little consolidation," Quinn said. "I wouldn't be surprised if we see $440."
Spot gold slid back to $441.25/2.20 an ounce, after a softer euro versus the dollar made the metal less attractive for non-U.S. investors.
Bullion earlier hit a 16-1/4-year high at $445.90 before retreating as far as $439.65. That compared with Wednesday's New York close at $444.25/5.00 and Thursday afternoon fix in London at $442.
December silver fell 6.5 cents to $7.60 an ounce, trading between $7.75, a seven-month high, and $7.56. Spot held at $7.57/60, down from $7.63/66 previously. The fix in London was $7.66.
January platinum tumbled $16.10 at $859.50 an ounce. Spot platinum slid to $858/862.
December palladium lost $3.50 to $219.50 an ounce. Spot palladium was at $215/220.
NEW YORK, Nov 18 (Reuters) - U.S. gold futures fell from a 16-1/4-year peak on Thursday as traders took profits from a rally above $445 an ounce amid a softer euro against the dollar and after a new much-hyped gold security launched in New York.
December delivery gold slipped $3.50 to $441.60 an ounce at 10:49 a.m. (1549 GMT) on the New York Mercantile Exchange's COMEX division, in a range between $440.20 and its overnight high at $446.40, which was futures' highest price since July 1988.
"We're seeing a reasonable amount of liquidation here," a gold trader at a bank said.
Dealers previously had been positioning themselves in front of the launch on Thursday of bullion-backed exchange-traded fund streetTRACKS Gold Shares on the New York Stock Exchange.
"I think a lot of people are saying, 'gosh, this price is so high. Why is everybody going to jump into gold at this stage,'" said the trader.
StreetTRACKS, the first gold exchange-traded fund in the United States, listed Thursday under stock symbol GLD . It is designed to track the price of gold and trade like any common stock on the exchange.
Gold also got bit by the dollar's rise from an all-time low against the euro at $1.3074 on profit-taking in the euro and a report showing lower U.S. weekly jobless claims.
"We're a little weaker off the spot (price) and the economic data encouraged a little bit of buying in the dollar," said AG Edwards commodity commentator James Quinn.
The firmer dollar, as well as gold's resistance up at the $444-$445 level and a top-heavy speculative net long position in COMEX futures, all combined to fuel the selling, he said.
"Open interest is very much one-sided, and I think you're going to see a little consolidation," Quinn said. "I wouldn't be surprised if we see $440."
Spot gold slid back to $441.25/2.20 an ounce, after a softer euro versus the dollar made the metal less attractive for non-U.S. investors.
Bullion earlier hit a 16-1/4-year high at $445.90 before retreating as far as $439.65. That compared with Wednesday's New York close at $444.25/5.00 and Thursday afternoon fix in London at $442.
December silver fell 6.5 cents to $7.60 an ounce, trading between $7.75, a seven-month high, and $7.56. Spot held at $7.57/60, down from $7.63/66 previously. The fix in London was $7.66.
January platinum tumbled $16.10 at $859.50 an ounce. Spot platinum slid to $858/862.
December palladium lost $3.50 to $219.50 an ounce. Spot palladium was at $215/220.