Commodities

Gold, Silver Close Lower on Profit Taking and Stronger U.S. Dollar

Stock quotes in this article:AUY, KGC, AEM, EGO 

NEW YORK (TheStreet ) -- Gold prices pulled back from record highs Wednesday as investors took advantage of high levels to take profits.

Gold for August delivery shed $1.70 to close at $1,615.10 an ounce at the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The gold price has traded as high as $1,628.80, a new record, and as low as $1,608.90 while the spot gold price was down $7.10 according to Kitco's gold index, giving up gains for the day.

Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com

Silver prices lost 13 cents to settle at $40.56 an ounce. The U.S. dollar index was adding 0.83% at $74.13 while the euro was shedding 0.91% vs. the dollar.

With the Dow Jones Industrial Average down triple digits, investors were taking profits were they could and sold gold at record highs.

The House of Representatives had been gearing up to vote on Speaker Boehner's debt plan in which the debt ceiling would be raised in two tranches based on spending cuts, but the plan hit a brick wall. The Congressional Budget Office said that his plan to cut $1.2 trillion over 10 years fell almost $400 billion short. This puts the Senate Democrat plan front and center, which also must face Budget Office scrutiny.



Uncertainty over an agreement was a green light for investors to buy gold, which pushed priced to $1,628 an ounce.

David Banister, chief investment strategist at ActiveTradingPartners.com, thinks that gold will hit $1,730 in a few weeks and maybe even soar to $1,800 an ounce. Banister doesn't think the U.S. will default, however, but that global fiscal issues and negative real interest rates -- the interest rate minus inflation -- will continue to support high gold prices.

"Any reaction to the downside on gold will be temporary," argues Banister. "Traders might be unwilling to make a commitment until they see the short term reaction," explaining why gold hasn't skyrocketed, "but I would say any short term pullback in gold on successful debt talks I would be a buyer."

Stan Dash, vice president of applied technical analysis at TradeStation, also sees prices at $1,730. Dash, in measuring rallies since gold's low in October of 2008, says that gold can typically move 20% in a leg of a bull market. A move to the $1,730 level would be a 17% rise from the May support level of $1,480 an ounce. "You can't argue with price," says Dash. "It's making new highs. It's still a bull market"

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Dow Jones S&P 500 NASDAQ 10-Year Note
12,454.83 1,317.82 2,837.53 17.45
Oil *
107.26
DOWN
74.92
DOWN
2.86
DOWN
1.85
DOWN
0.14
10 Yr
1.74%
SPDR Gold
152.68
-0.60%
-0.22%
-0.07%
-0.80%
Data delayed 20 minutes

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