
Bloomberg, (10/8) -- Gold rose for the
third straight day on speculation that the demand will increase amid
signs of a pickup in the economy in China, the world’s second-biggest
consumer of the metal. Silver advanced to a two-week high.
In
July, China’s industrial output rose more than estimated by analysts
from a year earlier, government data showed today. Yesterday, statistics
indicated a rebound in trade. The Standard & Poor’s GSCI Spot Index
of 24 raw materials climbed as much as 1.1 percent, snapping a
five-session slump. Zinc and nickel paced the rally, while platinum
jumped to an eight-week high.
“There is optimism about higher
demand from China as the economy improves,” Frank McGhee, the head
dealer at Integrated Brokerage Services LLC in Chicago, said in a
telephone interview. “The bullish mood in the industrial-metal complex
is helping gold and silver.”
Gold futures for December delivery
rose 0.2 percent to settle at $1,312.20 an ounce at 1:44 p.m. on the
Comex in New York. The metal gained 2.1 percent in the previous two
days.
Trading was 49 percent below the average in the past 100 days for this time, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
Gold
has fallen 22 percent this year as some investors lost faith the metal
as a store of value amid an equity rally and low inflation and concern
that the Federal Reserve may slow the pace of monetary stimulus.
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