gold futures prices expected week october 15-19 2012 : Gold futures ended Friday’s session at the lowest level in two weeks, as
traders were hesitant to push up prices amid ongoing uncertainty over
whether Spain will formally request a full-scale sovereign debt bailout.
On
the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures
for December delivery settled at USD1,755.25 a troy ounce by close of
trade on Friday, losing 0.9% on the day.
Earlier in the session
prices touched a daily low of USD1,753.75 a troy ounce, the weakest
level since September 26. On the week, gold futures declined 1.5%, the
biggest weekly drop since the last week of June.
Gold futures
were likely to find support at USD1,739.35 a troy ounce, the low from
September 26 and resistance at USD1,781.55, the high from October 8.
Market
players remained cautious amid ongoing uncertainty over Spain’s
position on requesting external financial aid from its euro zone
partners following a downgrade by ratings agency Standard & Poor’s.
S&P
cut the country’s credit rating by two notches to BBB-minus with a
negative outlook late Wednesday, just one notch above junk status,
citing “mounting risks to Spain’s public finances.”
Market
players have been anticipating for the past month that the Spanish
government would ask for a full-scale sovereign bailout.
A
bailout would allow the European Central Bank to step in and buy Spanish
sovereign debt, which would result in reduced borrowing costs for the
debt-strapped nation.
But Spain has been reluctant to do so because it may come with conditions on its budget.
Gold
prices came under additional pressure following the release of upbeat
U.S. economic data, which raised concern the Federal Reserve might scale
back its monetary easing measures.
Official data Friday showed
that U.S. consumer sentiment rose to its highest level in five years in
October. The University of Michigan said that its consumer sentiment
index rose to a seasonally adjusted 83.1 from 78.3 in September, the
highest level since September 2007.
The data came one day after
the U.S. Department of Labor said the number of individuals filing for
initial jobless benefits fell by 30,000 to a seasonally adjusted 339,000
in the previous week, compared to expectations for an increase of
1,000.
It was the lowest reading since February 2008, reinforcing
the view that the U.S. labor market is improving, following last week’s
stronger-than-expected non-farm payrolls report.
The Federal
Reserve announced last month that it will buy USD40 billion of
mortgage-backed securities each month until the U.S. labor market
improves.
In the week ahead, markets will continue to continue to
focus on whether Spain will formally request a bailout and if
international creditors will extend loans to Greece as the country
struggles to meet deficit reduction targets.
Meanwhile, the U.S.
is to release a flurry of data, including reports on retail sales,
manufacturing activity in New York and Philadelphia, initial jobless
claims and housing starts, among others.
Elsewhere on the Comex,
silver for December delivery settled at USD33.48 a troy ounce by close
of trade on Friday. Earlier in the session, silver futures touched a low
of USD33.46, the weakest level since September 26.
On the week, silver futures lost 3.05%.
Meanwhile, copper for December delivery shed 1.6% over the week to settle at USD3.696 a pound by close of trade Friday.
Growing fears over the health of the global economy have dampened the appeal of the industrial metal in recent sessions.
Copper
traders were looking ahead to Chinese third quarter growth figures due
out on October 18, to gauge whether the world second largest economy is
heading towards a hard or a soft landing.
A deeper slowdown in
China would impair a global expansion that is already faltering because
of the ongoing debt crisis in the euro zone.
The Asian nation is the world’s largest copper consumer, accounting for almost 40% of world consumption last year.
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