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Gold Pushes Through $950

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/ContrarianProfits/~3/bqNNP0PRaZ0/19440
Posted on Monday, July 27th, 2009 | In Market Commentary, Precious Metals
Contributed by: Doug Casey (http://www.contrarianprofits.com) -

Gold traded sideways through Hong Kong then shot north at the London open and remained range-bound between $951 and $953 for the rest of the day, finishing at $951.60/oz., up $3.60. For the week, gold is up 1.5%.
Platinum sank in Hong Kong, falling to an intraday low of $1167 before adding back all the early losses and a bunch more over the rest of the trading day, closing at $1186/oz., up $11. For the week, platinum is up 1.2%.

Silver developed the gentlest of upward trends early in London and rode that trend through the Globex, ending just off its intraday high at $13.87/oz., up 17 cents. For the week, silver is up 3.4%. (Click here for charts)

Although profit-taking kept gold from staging a big rally this week, the yellow metal should be well supported at current levels because of dollar weakness and inflation fears, analysts said.

“We are still up here in quite a high range. We don’t see any physical buying coming in at these levels, but what is supporting it is the dollar,” said Andrey Kryuchenkov, an analyst at VTB Capital.

“The dollar’s weakness and the idea that inflation expectations are on the rise are holding gold here,” Kryuchenkov added.

In company specific news, Mineweb reported that Kinross Gold (NYSE:KGC) has recently assumed stock price leadership of the loosely-defined Tier 1 global gold stocks sector, which includes 12 companies with an aggregate market value of just under $200 billion. Kinross’s stock price fluctuated between a 52-week low of $6.85 and high of $20.98 a share, with current trades around the $20.28 mark.

Barrick, the world’s biggest gold miner by value and production, is trading nearly 25% off its 52-week high. Kinross was one gold stock chosen for investment this year by US hedge fund Paulson & Co Inc., which famously scored gains of nearly $4 billion betting against banks in 2007 and 2008.

In the past several years, Kinross has transformed itself from a stodgy, higher cost gold producer to one that increasingly reports lower costs, along with a highly convincing longer-term growth profile.


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