A Junior Exploration & Mining Company Active in Gold & Silver Exploration
The Company has several active projects in Canada and Mexico
  • Demo Video
  • Private Messages
  • Edit My Profile
  • View/Edit Portfolio

Widget

Add Consolidated Spire Ventures widget to your own site or blog

Email Updates

Search

AGORACOM News Flash

AGORACOM CONFERENCE UPDATE

  • 12 More Companies Added To Schedule For Dec 3 & 4. (See Schedule)
  • Keynote Speakers Include Peter Grandich, Eric Coffin (See Speakers)
  • Workshop Presentations Added To Thursday Schedule
  • Investors from over 45 Countries Have Visited
  • Conference Begins 2 Weeks From Today!

Looking forward to seeing all of you there gang.  Registration is free for investors.  AGORACOM Members register with just one click.  Non-members takes less than 60 seconds.  Register here (see form on right hand side)

 

Message: Gold surges to near record territory

Bam-bam
Rank: [?]
Treasurer
Points: [?]
298
Rating: [?]
Votes: 10 Score: 2.0
  • Currently 2.0/5 Stars.
Did you know? You can earn activity points by filling your profile with information about yourself (what city you live in, your favorite team, blogs etc.)

Gold surges to near record territory

posted on Jun 04, 09 11:50AM


Gold surges to near record territory

The metal gains ground as the dollar slumps and investors bet inflation will rebound. Analysts see $1,000 an ounce on the horizon.



Top of Form

NEW YORK (CNNMoney.com) -- Gold prices charged higher Thursday, with another run at $1,000 an ounce looking increasingly likely, as the dollar remains weak and concerns about inflation boost demand for the metal.



Gold for August delivery rose $16.70 to settle at $982.30 an ounce after hitting an intra day high of $992.10 an ounce earlier this week.



The metal is up 11% from its mid April low of $869.50 an ounce as the U.S. dollar has tumbled against rival currencies. Gold and other commodities that are priced in dollars often gain ground when the greenback weakens.



The recent run up has raised bets that gold could top $1,000 an ounce for the third time ever. Gold rose to an all-time settlement high of $1,003.20 an ounce last year. It made another big push early this year, closing at $1001.80 an ounce Feb. 20.



In both cases, jittery investors flocked to the metal to preserve capital as the financial markets erupted in volatility.



This time around, however, gold is benefiting from concerns that the U.S. government's efforts to rescue the economy will result in higher rates of inflation. In addition to being a safe-haven, tangible assets such as gold are considered a hedge against rising prices.

Tom Pawlicki, a precious metals analyst at MF Global, thinks gold could top $1,000 as investors fret over the "funding demands of the U.S. government."



"Budget defects create worries in the market that more money will have to be printed," he said. "The dollar will suffer in this environment."



The government has pumped billions of dollars into the economy to stabilize the financial system and revive the flow of credit, which has helped expand the nation's budget gap to unprecedented levels.



While inflation remains relatively tame, many analysts worry that it will become a problem as the economy recovers and the massive amount of liquidity in the market will have to be absorbed.



Looking ahead, Pawlicki said the rally could have some staying power, since large investment funds have shown renewed interest in the gold market following a mass exodus last year.



"A lot of hedge funds are coming back into this market," he said, based on among other things, a higher level of open interest in gold futures. "That interest doesn't turn on a dime," he said.



Meanwhile, other analysts point to the uncertain economic outlook as a reason for the run up in gold prices, since many investors think hard assets are the best way to store wealth when the going gets rough.



"With continued economic weakness across the board, there's a lot of uncertainty about what's going to happen," said Carlos Sanchez, precious metals analyst at CPM Group in New York.



Even as the economy has shown some signs of recovery and stocks have rallied broadly over the last few months, the market is still jittery about the possibility of more turmoil, he said.



At the same time, the gold market is very sensitive to geopolitical strife. Some market watchers say tension with North Korea and ongoing concerns about Iran have helped boost demand for gold recently.



"There are major problems going on right now," Sanchez said. "In times like this, you have investors rushing towards safe haven assets like gold."



New Message

Please login to post a reply

AGORACOM Quick Tips

Small-Cap CEO Lessons - Is Your CEO Out Of Touch? ... Not Anymore

Executive Address

Czs-buchanan-bc
"Beyond the Press Release"
May 03, 2009

with Mr. Brian Buchanan President and CEO

View Broadcast