Renewed buying interest from jewelry fabricators helped push gold prices higher Tuesday.
February-dated contracts closed up $5.60 at $615 an ounce on the Comex division of the Nymex. The bullion exchange-traded funds, streetTracks Gold Shares (GLD Quote - Cramer on GLD - Stock Picks) and iShares Comex Gold Trust(IAU Quote - Cramer on IAU - Stock Picks), were both up around 0.6% in recent action. "The fact that physical buyers came into a falling market is relatively bullish as they tend to stand aside during times of volatility," notes Rhona O'Connell, an analyst at GFMS Analytics in London. "A period of sideways trading should encourage further interest." Whether the market does stabilize is still uncertain. At least one industry watcher says the price of gold is still vulnerable. "Given the current climate there remains the risk of further speculative led liquidation," writes James Moore, an analyst at TheBullionDesk.com, in a daily market brief. Providing a further headwind for bulls was the relative strength of the greenback. Gold prices tend to move in the opposite direction to those of the U.S. currency. One dollar would recently buy 119.195 yen, up from 118.75 yen late Monday. One euro was buying $1.3008, slightly down from $1.3023 previously. Meanwhile, the European Central Bank said it sold 25 million euros of gold and receivables last week, or about 1.6 tons. In the gold patch, mining stocks were mixed, with shares of Harmony Gold(HMY Quote - Cramer on HMY - Stock Picks) losing 4% recently, while Yamana Gold(AUY Quote - Cramer on AUY - Stock Picks) was rallying, up 4.6%.


