GOLD PRICE NEWS â The gold price came under heavy selling pressure Wednesday morning, falling $27.31, or 1.6%, to $1,643.63 per ounce. Coupled with the prior two days of losses, the price of gold extended its weekly decline to 2.4% and reached its lowest level since January 18. Silver declined in concert with the gold price, although by a smaller amount of 1.2% to $32.87 per ounce. The U.S. Dollar Index continued to climb, reaching its highest level since mid-January as well.
On Tuesday the gold price tumbled $28.26, or 1.7%, to $1,670.94 per ounce after the Federal Reserve decided not to add to its slew of accommodative monetary policies. The price of gold fell modestly ahead of the Fed meeting, but turned sharply lower as the U.S. dollar strengthened in late afternoon trading. The SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), a proxy for the gold price and the worldâs largest gold ETF, settled lower by $2.77 at $162.30 per share.
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Silver retreated alongside the price of gold yesterday, albeit by a smaller amount. Goldâs sister precious metal dropped $0.34, or 1.0%, to $33.26 per ounce. With yesterdayâs sell-off in precious metals, the price of gold and silver are now lower on a month-to-date basis by 1.3% and 5.1%, respectively.
Tuesdayâs gold price weakness put pressure on gold shares, as the Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (GDX) fell 0.5% to $52.11 per share. In doing so, the GDX reached its lowest closing level in over six weeks and extended its loss in March to 5.9%. Notable decliners yesterday included Barrick Gold (ABX), AngloGold Ashanti (AU), and Newmont Mining (NEM). ABX declined by 1.0% to $54.86, AU by 0.4% to $39.49, and NEM by 1.0% to $54.86 per share.
In contrast to the gold sector, the broader equity markets marched higher. The Dow Jones Industrial Average surged 217.97 points to 13,177.68, its highest level since December 31, 2007. Investor risk aversion continued to decline, as the CBOE Volatility Index hit a five-year low of 13.99 before finishing down by 5.4% at 14.80.
The gold price began the day by inching lower after the latest U.S. economic report showed a further improvement in the data. Retail sales for February rose by 1.1%, the largest increase in five months. Credit Suisse economist Jonathan Basile wrote in a note to clients that âThis is a pleasant surprise on the overall picture for the economy. For the Fed, itâs steady as she goes. They will be encouraged, but there is still a long way to go.â
The encouraging retail sales data confirmed the Fed statementâs assessment of the economy â in particularly, where it noted that âhousehold spending and business fixed investment have continued to advance.â The Fed also pointed out that âlabor market conditions have improved further,â although the unemployment rate âremains elevatedâ and the âhousing sector remains depressed.â
Based on its assessment of the economy, Chairman Bernanke and the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) chose to continue with Operation Twist and reiterate the need for near-zero interest rates through late 2014. As expected, the Fed did not launch a third round of quantitative easing (QE3).
The decision included one dissenting vote â by Richmond Fed President Jeffrey Lacker â who took a more hawkish stance than during his dissent at the previous Fed meeting. In January, Lacker preferred not to specify the time period for near-zero interest rates, while now he disagreed with the need for âexceptionally low levels of the federal funds rate through late 2014.â
Commenting on the Fed meeting, Jan Hatzius â chief U.S. economist at Goldman Sachs â wrote in a note to clients that âOn net the FOMC statement is very close to our expectations as the FOMC upgrades its description of the economic outlook, acknowledges the impact of oil prices on inflation, and softens (but retains) the âsignificant downside risksâ phrase.â
While Hatzius did not discuss the implications for the gold price, the combination of the absence of QE3 and declining risk aversion in the markets put considerable pressure on the yellow metal. Although the Fed stated that âexpects to maintain a highly accommodative stance for monetary policy,â the gold market was clearly disappointed by the moderately less dovish tone emanating from the U.S. central bank.