Metals Stocks: Gold Ekes Out A Gain To Notch Another Finish At A More Than 6-year High

Author photo

By

Markets/commodities reporter

Author photo

Deputy markets editor

Gold prices recovered earlier losses Thursday to score a modest gain and another finish at a more than six-year high, on the back of haven-related buying spurred on by risks to the global economy.

The magnitude of the gains in the gold market Wednesday “were somewhat disappointing given the 800-point decline in the Dow and an avalanche of dire forecast[s] for the U.S. economy,” analysts at Zaner Metals said in daily commentary.

Still, “investors continue to push money toward gold and silver in a flight to quality move, and it should be difficult to completely eliminate economic slowing concerns without an improvement in trade relations or a series of strong U.S. data points,” they said.

Gold for December delivery GCZ19, +0.39%  tacked on $3.40, or 0.2%, to settle at $1,531.20 an ounce, the highest most-active contract finish since April 11, 2013, FactSet data show. September silver SIU19, -0.32%, however, held onto some if its earlier loss, to finish 6.6 cents, or 0.4% lower, at $17.214 an ounce.

“Prices will remain susceptible to the unpredictable nature of U.S.-China trade headlines while the stable [U.S. dollar] will continue to entice near term profit-taking,” said Stephen Innes, managing partner at VM Markets, in a note.

Gold had fallen early Thursday as U.S. benchmark stock indexes moved up following Wednesday’s rout, which had been inspired by growing recession fears tied to weak economic data out of Europe and China. An inversion of the main measure of the U.S. yield curve, which is seen as a recession warning signal, amplified Wednesday’s losses on Wall Street.

Among economic data Thursday, U.S. retail sales surged in July, climbing by a better-than-expected 0.7%. Industrial production in July, however, fell by 0.2%, marking the second drop in the past four months.

Meanwhile, stocks appeared to take some solace from remarks by a spokesperson for China’s foreign ministry who said Beijing still hoped to reach a mutually acceptable solution on the trade conflict. Earlier, China said it was prepared to take unspecified steps to retaliate for planned U.S. tariffs set to take effect on Sept. 1.

In other metals trade, September palladium PAU19, +1.55%  rose 1.6% to $1,438.60 an ounce, while October platinum PLV19, -0.62%  settled 0.7% lower at $842 an ounce.

September copper HGU19, -0.04%  added 0.1% at $2.595 a pound.

Among exchange-traded funds, SPDR Gold Shares GLD, +0.76%  edged up by 0.5%.

RECENT NEWS

Why Low Volatility Is Not The Same As Low Risk

Why Low Volatility is Not The Same As Low Risk Some of the worst-performing portfolios in... Read more

Gyrostat May Market Outlook: When The Cost Of Protection Falls - Signals For Portfolio Positioning

This monthly Gyrostat Risk-Managed Market Outlook does not attempt to forecast market direction. It... Read more

The Risk Most Portfolios Do Not Explicitly Manage

Most portfolios are constructed on a simple and widely accepted assumption: that equity risk will be r... Read more

Gyrostat April Outlook: The Changing Cost Of Protection

Signals For Portfolio Construction This monthly Gyrostat Risk-Managed Market Outlook does not attemp... Read more

What Advisers Misunderstand About Protection

Protection is rarely rejected outright. More often, it is misunderstood. Most advisers recognise th... Read more

Gyrostat Market Outlook: Looking Beyond The 30-day Volatility Headlines

This outlook examines how financial markets are pricing risk rather than attempting to forecast market... Read more