While you were sleeping: Gold up, greenback down
While you were sleeping: Gold strengthens, greenback weakens
Sept. 30 (BusinessDesk) – Gold futures nudged higher to a new record as support for the U.S. dollar continued to erode, boosting demand for commodities as an alternative investment.
Gold futures for December delivery rose to as much as US$1,314.80 an ounce in New York and was recently at US$1309.25. Gold is rallying for a 10th straight year, which Bloomberg reported was the longest run since at least 1920.
Gold has advanced as the greenback slides to an eight-month low against a basket of currencies amid bets the Federal Reserve will extend its quantitative easing measures to revive a U.S. economy that may only narrowly escape sliding back into recession.
Federal Reserve
chairman Ben Bernanke is scheduled to testify before the
Senate Banking Committee on Thursday in the U.S., giving
investors an opportunity to gauge the prospects of the Fed
extending its support for the
world’s biggest economy
as the greenback heads for a quarterly loss.
The Dollar Index, which measures the U.S. dollar against six major currencies, fell to 78.709 from 79.014 and briefly sank to 78.616.
The dollar fell to $1.364 per euro from $1.3585 yesterday and reached a five-month low of $1.3639 earlier.
The yen strengthened to 83.61 per dollar from
83.87, heading to the low it reached this month of 83.50 yen
to the dollar after Japan intervened to weaken its currency.
The Ministry of Finance is scheduled to detail how much it
spent on currency intervention in the past month amid
speculation it stands ready to
act again.
The euro bought 114.06 yen from 113.94.
Copper rose to a 26-year high in London after figures showed Chinese manufacturing rose for a second month, stoking demand for the industrial metal from the world’s biggest consumer.
The metal also gained after figures for the London Metal Exchange showed stockpiles are shrinking.
Copper for delivery in three months rose 1.4% to US$8,064 a metric ton in London and earlier reached US$8,075 a ton.
Crude oil rose to a
seven-week high after U.S. fuel stockpiles fell.
Crude
for November delivery climbed 2.4% to US$77.99 a barrel on
the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Equity markets were mixed overnight. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was little changed at 10858.70 and the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index sat at 1147.63, down 0.01%.
Hewlett-Packard rose 2.4% after beating estimates with its forecast for sales and earnings. Chevron Corp. climbed 0.9% as crude oil rallied.
Stocks in Europe fell after retailer Hennes & Mauritz AB said its gross margin has shrunk, pacing a decline in retailers and concerns re-emerged about debt levels in Spain.
The FTSE 100 fell 0.2% in London, while Germany’s DAX 30 dipped 0.5% and France’s CAC 40 fell 0.7%.
(BusinessDesk)