RTRS:PRECIOUS-Gold rebounds; Europe, US debt worry weigh
* Light buying emerges after price dip
* Spot gold could fall to $1,619-$1,637 - technicals
* Coming up: U.S. GDP, July; 1330 GMT
By Rujun Shen
SINGAPORE, Nov 22 (Reuters) - Spot gold gained half a
percent on Tuesday, as a decline of more than 2 percent
attracted some buyers, while worries about debt crises in both
the United States and the euro zone are expected to keep
sentiment fragile.
U.S. lawmakers abandoned their high-profile effort to rein
in the country's ballooning debt on Monday, but rating agencies
Standard & Poor's and Moody's said there will be no immediate
downgrade of the country's credit
ratings.
On the other side of the Atlantic, the debt crisis swept
closer to the heart of Europe as Moody's warned about France's
credit ratings outlook.
"Today there has been some buying interest on the physical
market, although overall trading is thin," said Peter Fung, head
of dealing at Wing Fung Precious Metals in Hong Kong.
"The strength in dollar is suppressing gold prices, but for
the long term, people would still want to keep gold as a safe
haven."
Investors are expected to remain fickle in the short term
due to the turmoil in currency and other markets, and the next
support level is the 150-day moving average around $1,650,
traders said.
Buying interest from China emerged in the Shanghai market,
with buyers taking advantage of a discount of about $30 in
international prices to Shanghai prices.
But this arbitrage buying has eased as the price gap quickly
narrowed to below $10. The popular Shanghai gold spot deferred
contract traded at 346.9 yuan a gram, or $1,694.66
an ounce.
Spot gold gained half a percent to $1,686.79 an ounce
by 0252 GMT, off the four-week low of $1,665.88 hit on Monday.
U.S. gold rose 0.6 percent to $1,688.
Technical analysis suggested that spot gold could fall
further to a range of $1,619-$1,637 per ounce during the day,
said Reuters market analyst Wang Tao.
Spot gold has fallen more than $100 over the past week,
slumping along with riskier assets, as doubts deepened about the
ability of European nations to effectively contain the debt
crisis.
"We are only seeing tepid buying demand today, as people
expect more liquidation on the way with the ongoing sell-off in
equities and other markets," said a Singapore-based trader.
Spot silver lost 0.4 percent to $31.51 an ounce,
recovering from a one-month low of $30.63 hit in the previous
session.
China's trade data revealed that the country's silver
imports slumped 26 percent in October from a year earlier. The
inflow of silver powder, used in the photovoltaic industry,
dropped 20 percent.
"The (photovoltaic) sector had provided some support to
silver prices upon the investment appetite sell-off, but in
light of the concern about industrial demand, this is an element
that has now softened, thus increasing the importance of
investment demand to make up for the fundamental surplus," said
Barclays in a research note.
"However, investment demand in silver has also slowed
recently, leaving prices more vulnerable to the downside."
Precious metals prices 0252 GMT
Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Volume
Spot Gold 1686.79 8.29 +0.49 18.83
Spot Silver 31.51 -0.13 -0.41 2.11
Spot Platinum 1553.24 7.24 +0.47 -12.12
Spot Palladium 588.00 3.27 +0.56 -26.45
TOCOM Gold 4180.00 -70.00 -1.65 12.09 67546
TOCOM Platinum 3874.00 -55.00 -1.40 -17.50 10228
TOCOM Silver 77.20 -1.10 -1.40 -4.69 408
TOCOM Palladium 1472.00 -14.00 -0.94 -29.80 247
COMEX GOLD DEC1 1688.00 9.40 +0.56 18.76 10853
COMEX SILVER DEC1 31.52 0.40 +1.30 1.87 1550
Euro/Dollar 1.3502
Dollar/Yen 77.07
TOCOM prices in yen per gram. Spot prices in $ per ounce.
COMEX gold and silver contracts show the most active months