Dollar Weakness Helps Lift Gold
Near-term gold prices in the U.S. jumped Monday as the dollar pulled back.
Benchmark bullion futures rose $16.10 to close at $874.10 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange. The
streetTracks Gold Shares
(GLD) - Get Report
exchange-traded fund, which holds bars of gold, was gaining 1.6%.
The value of gold has pulled back substantially in recent weeks after reaching an all-time high of around $1,030 March 17 at the height of the banking crisis when
Bear Stearns
(BSC)
was rescued by
JPMorgan Chase
(JPM) - Get Report
after a near-collapse. At least part of the story in the retreat in gold prices has been a strengthening U.S. dollar, the value of which tends to move in the opposite direction to that of gold.
The other piece of the tale has been the liquidation of gold holdings by the streetTracks Gold Shares. The fund has seen redemptions of about 84 tons, a large quantity for the relatively illiquid bullion market, since mid-April, as investors have grown more sanguine about the problems plaguing the credit markets.
As for the precious metals patch, shares of
Eldorado Gold
(EGO) - Get Report
and
Kinross Gold
(KGC) - Get Report
were both ahead more than 4%, buoyed by the rallying gold price.
In the currency markets, one euro was buying $1.5496, up from $1.5414 on Friday. The dollar was buying 104.76 Japanese yen, down from 105.20 yen previously. The British pound was selling for $1.971 vs. $1.974.
The
CurrencyShares Euro Trust
(FXE) - Get Report
and the
CurrencyShares Japanese Yen Trust
(FXY) - Get Report
were both up 0.5%. The
CurrencyShares British Pound Sterling
(FXB) - Get Report
was off 0.2%.