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[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]

[Most Recent Quotes from www.kitco.com]




Gold Hits 6-month High, Eyes U.S. Payrolls Data

Contrarian Profits (September 3rd, 2009) Writes:

Gold prices rallied today, Thursday, to their highest level since February on strong investment demand amid caution ahead of key U.S. non-farm payrolls data on Friday (London GMT).

Bill O’Neill, managing partner of New Jersey-based LOGIC Advisors, said that asset-diversification demand for gold and other precious metals by jittery investors amid shaky equities markets propelled gold’s rally.

Spot gold hit an intraday peak of $992.55, which marked the highest price since Feb. 24. It was at $989.10 an ounce at 12:07 p.m. EDT (1607 GMT), against $976.60 an ounce late in New York on Wednesday.

U.S. December gold futures were up $10.70 at $989.20 an ounce on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Fears that U.S. payrolls data may disappoint sparked a flight to quality among investors on Wednesday. The metal broke out of its previous $930-$960 range as a move through technical resistance above $960 sparked a rally.

VTB Capital analyst Andrey Kryuchenkov

...

Gold Ends Lower as Risk-averse Investors Sell

Contrarian Profits (August 31st, 2009) Writes:

Gold futures trimmed losses but still ended lower on Monday, as risk-averse investor sentiment and a tumbling Chinese equities market prompted selling in bullion and other commodities.

The positive link between gold and equities market has been on the rise, as the metal is used as a hedge against inflation and erosion of portfolio values.

“The markets today are focusing on China and the sharp break of the Shanghai equities index,” said Bill O’Neill, managing partner of New Jersey-based LOGIC Advisors.

“In recent weeks, we noted the weakness in the equities, of course, has had a positive relationship with commodities, and that continued to be a factor,” he said.

Global stocks fell on Monday, dragged by a six percent tumble in China, which sent nervous investors into the yen for safe haven. Wall Street was off about 1 percent in afternoon trade.

U.S. December gold futures settled down $5.30 at $953.50 an ounce on the COMEX

...

Base Metals Mostly Lower

Doug Casey (July 3rd, 2009) Writes:

The base metals were mostly lower on Thursday. Copper sank from the pre-dawn hours to mid-morning, bottoming at $2.24, but rallied back from there to finish at $2.2754/lb., down more than 3½ cents. 

Nickel had a pair of jagged ups and downs to mid-morning, but blazed higher from there, closing just off its intraday highs at $7.4382/lb., up 13 cents. Zinc was also choppy, ending little changed at $0.6994/lb., down a half-cent. Aluminum was weak, dropping more than a penny, to $0.7267/lb., while lead also sagged, shedding more than a penny and three-quarters, to $0.7626/lb.

Copper led all the industrial metals but nickel downward yesterday, as traders heeded the strengthening dollar and were spooked by bad economic data from both the U.S. and Europe that served notice a global economic recovery could be a long time in coming.

“When you have these continued weak employment reports, yes, they show maybe we

...

Stocks Dip, Investors Cautious on Recovery

Contrarian Profits (July 3rd, 2009) Writes:

World stocks fell today, Friday, after a disappointing U.S. jobs report and a sluggish euro zone services sector survey reinforced expectations that the process of recovery in the global economy would be long and slow.

U.S. employers cut far more jobs than expected last month and the unemployment rate hit 9.5 percent, the highest in nearly 26 years.

While analysts caution that jobs data is a lagging indicator and unemployment can still rise when the economy is turning around, it was enough to prompt investors to reduce their risk assets especially before a long weekend in the United States.

Furthermore, signs of a recovery in the euro zone’s dominant service sector took a backwards step in June with the final services purchasing manager index coming in at 44.7 in June, down from May’s seven-month high of 44.8.

This marks the thirteenth consecutive month the index has been below the 50.0 mark that divides growth

...

On-Demand Webinar: Getting Leverage, Going Short

IndexUniverse Staff (May 18th, 2009) Writes:
IndexUniverse.com Editor Matt Hougan explains everything you need to know about leveraged and inverse ETFs, including how—and how not— to use them in a portfolio. IndexUniverse.com editor Matt Hougan explains everything you need to know about leveraged and inverse ETFs, including how—and how not— to use them in a portfolio. Hougan is joined by panelists Louis Stanasolovich, CEO and president of Legend Financial Advisors, and Dan O’Neill, president and CIO of DirexionShares.

Click here to view the webinar, with full audio (including the previously recorded audience Q&A). Click here to download a PDF copy of Hougan’s PowerPoint presentation.


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