
Bloomberg, (11/7) -- Gold futures
rallied to a two-week high after Federal Reserve Chairman Ben S.
Bernanke said yesterday that the U.S. needs “highly accommodative
monetary policy for the foreseeable future.” Silver also gained.
Bullion
slumped 23 percent last quarter as Bernanke said that the central bank
may reduce its $85 billion of monthly asset purchases this year. Minutes
of a Fed policy meeting released yesterday showed many officials wanted
to see more signs of improving employment before backing a cut in bond
buying. The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits
unexpectedly increased to a two-month high in the week ended July 6,
Labor Department figures showed today.
“Gold got a boost after
Bernanke gave the impression that tapering is currently a distant
dream,” Carlos Perez-Santalla, a New York-based broker at Marex North
America LLC, said in a telephone interview. “Today’s data further
cements the fact that the economy has not completely recovered.”
Gold
futures for August delivery climbed 2.6 percent to settle at $1,279.90
an ounce at 1:46 p.m. on the Comex in New York, the biggest jump for a
most-active contract since July 1. Earlier, the precious metal touched
$1,297.20, the highest since June 24, the last time the price topped
$1,300.
Trading was 24 percent higher than the average of the
past 100 days for that time of day, according to data compiled by
Bloomberg.
“Sentiment will now be to the upside, and the market
will be looking for an attempt on $1,300,” David Govett, head of
precious metals at Marex Spectron Group in London, said today in a
report.
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