Gold slides 4%, near 3-yr low as Wall Street rallies

Silver too fell to its lowest since August 2010 at $18.39 an ounce

<a href="http://www.shutterstock.com/pic-115284682/stock-photo-many-gold-bars-background.html?src=QiSnLYS6ChuD3R-AfZRaag-1-34" target="_blank">Gold</a> image via Shutterstock
Reuters New York/London
Last Updated : Jun 27 2013 | 7:36 AM IST
  Gold tumbled 4% on Wednesday, taking it near a three-year low as a rallying US equity markets further cut into demand for bullion as a hedge against economic uncertainty.
 
Silver dropped 5 % and platinum group metals also declined sharply.
 
Bullion tumbled again even after the US government slashed its estimate for first-quarter economic growth, which made investors less worried that the Federal Reserve would move soon to end its US economic stimulus.
 

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Bullion has slid around $125 an ounce in four sessions since the Fed signalled it plans to wind down the era of easy money. With two trading days left in the second quarter, gold was down 23 % for the period, on course for its biggest quarterly decline since Reuters began tracking gold prices in 1968.
 
"We bought gold for two reasons: because we were worried about the inflationary impact of policy and because we thought the financial system was going to fall apart," said Sean Corrigan, chief investment strategist at Diapason Commodities Management.
 
"Although it may be completely the wrong judgement, the market has decided that none of those at the moment is a concern," Corrigan said.
 
Spot gold slumped to its lowest since August 2010 at $1,223.54 an ounce. It was last down 4 % at $1,225.91 an ounce by 3:08 p.m. EDT (1908 GMT).
 
US gold futures for August delivery settled down $45.30 to $1,229.80. Trading volume exceeded 315,000 lots, sharply above its 30-day average of 211,000, preliminary Reuters data showed.
 
Gold, which has lost more than a quarter of its value this year, accelerated losses during Wednesday's session as the S&P 500 rose. The benchmark US stock index was up more than 1 % in late trade.
 
"People want risk-on and gold is therefore seen as a source of cash and not as a safe haven, because that's not needed," said Simon Weeks, head of precious metals at the Bank of Nova Scotia.
 
On Tuesday, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund posted its biggest outflow in two months. Holdings in SPDR Gold Trust fell 16.23 tonnes, 1.65 % from the day before, to 969.50 tonnes, their lowest since February 2009.
 
On charts, several technical analyses including the relative strength index suggested gold is oversold, said Carlos Perez-Santalla at brokerage Marex Spectron. "A pop could be expected if another test of the downside fails," he said.
 
Silver fell to its lowest since August 2010 at $18.39 an ounce. Spot prices were later down 5.2 % at $18.57 an ounce.
 
ETF OUTFLOW, ASIA DEMAND EYED
 
The world's No. 1 gold ETF the SPDR Gold Shares reported the biggest one-day drop in its holdings in more than two months at 16.23 tonnes on Tuesday. That brought the fund's total outflow for the year to 381 tonnes.
 
Further weighing on gold, demand in the No. 1 consumer India is likely to fall this quarter as the government moves to curb gold imports.
 
Worries about a liquidity crunch in China also pressured physical gold demand, analysts said.
 
Among platinum group metals, platinum was down 3.8 % at 1,298.99 an ounce, while palladium slid 4.9 % to $629.97 an ounce.
 
 
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First Published: Jun 27 2013 | 1:36 AM IST

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