Monday Open: $1,328.70
Weekly High: $1,336.40
Weekly Low: $1,285.10
Friday Close: $1,307.90
The week began in anticipation of major economic news the rest of the week and a high opening statement on Monday. The dollar hit a five-week low on Monday, causing gold to start out on a slight upswing. Tuesday flipped the switch and gold endured modest losses as those outside markets turned bearish – the dollar rose and crude oil sank.
The first big news of the week occurred on Wednesday when the FOMC released their minutes and some key U.S. economic data came out. Wednesday’s price of gold took a slip from these two points, mainly the latter. U.S. gross domestic product for the second quarter reported higher-than-expected numbers, ranking at 1.7$ instead of 0.9%. The monthly ADP jobs report also showed gains, reporting 200,000 new jobs instead of the expected 180,000. The FOMC minutes were still accommodative to gold, with Chairman Ben Bernanke waiting on pushing the tapering program ahead. The new expected start date for the long-anticipated change to Federal Reserve monetary policy, which would be extremely bearish for gold, has been now circulating as around September.
Thursday regained some of those losses as Europe started off on some positive trading deals with the U.S. and gold traders were bolstered by the final closing statement from Bernanke that came out after the traing day had ended. There was no mention of any start date for the tapering program in this statement, a good sign for gold bugs.
Friday, however, undid all the gains of the week and slipped down below the $1,300 mark on very strong U.S. economic data. U.S. manufacturing data and jobless claims reports pushed gold down, further exacerbating worries that positive economic reports will influence an earlier decision by the FOMC.
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