



London: Gold climbed to a record in London and New York as a weaker dollar prompted investors to buy bullion as an alternative investment.
The dollar slumped as much as 1.1% against a basket of six major currencies after the Group of 20 (G-20) governments agreed to keep stimulus measures and remained silent on the greenback’s decline this year. Gold jumped 5.7% in the past month in London as the dollar index slipped 1.9% and as news last week of an Indian government bullion purchase raised speculation that other countries would follow suit.
“The dollar will continue to have a very big impact on the metals and gold,” Afshin Nabavi, a senior vice president at bullion refiner MKS Finance SA in Geneva, said on Monday by phone. “Gold has got quite a way to go.”
Gold for immediate delivery rose as much as $14.40, or 1.3%, to $1,109.50 an ounce in London and traded at $1,108.88 by 11:06 am local time. December gold futures climbed as much as 1.3% to $1,109.90 an ounce on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Comex division and were last at $1,109.20.
The metal climbed to $1,108.50 in the morning “fixing” in London, an all-time high, from $1,096.75 at the afternoon fixing on November 6. Some mining companies use fixings to sell production. Spot prices advanced 4.8% last week, the biggest gain since April.
“Scrap sales are pretty minimal,” Nabavi said. “You’d expect at these levels there would be tons and tons, but it’s not the case.”
The dollar index, a measure of the greenback against the euro and five other currencies, fell to a two-week low today. The index tumbled 7.8% this year, fueling a 26% rally in spot gold prices. It slipped last week as Federal Reserve officials left interest rates near zero.
“The upside price benefits of rising expectations that central banks are shifting from net sellers to net buyers were reinforced by another dovish FOMC meeting, a rise in US unemployment and the continuing commitment to economic stimulus by the G-20 finance ministers,” Morgan Stanley analysts led by Hussein Allidina said in a note on Monday.
June-delivery gold in Shanghai gained as much as 1.4% to 242.26 yuan a gram ($1,104 an ounce), the highest price since futures started trading in January 2008.
India’s central bank last month bought 200 tonne of bullion from the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for $6.7 billion. The country now holds 557.7 tonne in its reserves, the...
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