Gold Edges 10 Cents Higher on the Week

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100g fine gold 999.9 bar
Gold edged up 10 cents this week

Most precious metals advanced Friday. Robust gains in gold and silver lifted their prices up for the week after they dropped sharply last week.

Gold for April delivery rose $13.20, or 1%, to settle at $1,299.30 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.

Gold was "clearly reacting to the jobs numbers, but this is too obvious," MarketWatch quoted Jeff Wright, executive vice president of GoldMining Inc. "In my opinion, gold is responding to the weekly downtrend in the U.S. equity markets along with U.S. dollar weakness [Friday] across the major currencies."

U.S. employers added only 20,000 jobs in February compared to 311,000 jobs in January, the Labor Depart said Friday in its monthly jobs report. The unemployment rate fell to 3.8% from 4% in January.

Gold futures inched up 10 cents this week after dropping 2.5% last week. Including today’s gain, gold has claimed just two wins in ten sessions. Before then, on Feb. 20, the yellow metal finished at $1,347.90 an ounce to score a ten-month high. Gold prices are now 1.4% higher on the year to date.

In looking ahead to next week, Kitco News offers the following forecasts via their Wall Street & Main Street surveys:

"Fourteen market professionals took part in the Wall Street survey. Twelve participants, or 86%, described themselves as bullish for the week ahead. There was one vote each, or 7%, for lower and neutral.

Meanwhile, 538 respondents took part in an online Main Street poll. A total of 274 voters, or 51%, called for gold to rise. Another 177, or 33%, predicted gold would fall. The remaining 87 voters, or 16%, saw a sideways market."

Elsewhere, silver for May delivery surged 30.9 cents, or 2.1%, to settlement at $15.349 an ounce. On Thursday, the precious metal finished at its worst level since Dec. 24. Friday’s increase was enough to take away prior-day losses, driving silver 0.6% higher on the week. Silver prices are still 1.2% lower on the year.

In PGM futures on Friday and for the week:

  • April platinum edged up 50 cents, or less than 0.1%, to $817.60 an ounce, but sank 5.3% on the week.

  • Palladium for June delivery fell $23.40, or 1.6%, to $1,459 an ounce, for a 3.1% weekly loss. A week ago Tuesday, Feb. 26, palladium registered a record settlement at $1,519.70 an ounce.

Both are higher on the year with gains of 2.1% for platinum and 21.9% for palladium.

London Precious Metals Prices

London precious metals prices finished divided Friday and lower on the week. In comparing their levels from Thursday PM to Friday PM:

  • Gold added $11.45, or 0.9%, to $1,296.75 an ounce.
  • Silver rose 4 cents, or 0.3%, to $15.115 an ounce.
  • Platinum declined $6, or 0.7%, to $818 an ounce.
  • Palladium fell $23, or 1.5%, to $1,509 an ounce.

In LBMA results for the week, the losses reached 1.2% for gold, 2.9% for silver, 5.2% for platinum, and 2.8% for palladium.

US Mint 2019 Bullion Sales

United States Mint bullion sales slowed from a week ago. In headline week-over-week comparisons:

  • Gold bullion coins rose by 2,000 ounces after rising by 2,600 ounces last week. Splits included 1,500 ounces in American Gold Eagles compared to 2,100 previously and 500 ounces in American Gold Buffalos to match the previous week.

  • American Silver Eagles sales were flat this week after climbing by 100,000 ounces last week.

  • American Platinum Eagle sales were also flat on the week after rising by 600 ounces last week.

Below is a sales breakdown of U.S. Mint bullion products with columns listing the number of coins sold during varying periods.

US Mint Bullion Sales (# of coins)
Friday Last Week January February March / This Week 2019 Sales
$100 American Eagle 1 Oz Platinum Coin 0 600 27,100 2,400 0 29,500
$50 American Eagle 1 Oz Gold Coin 0 1,500 44,500 11,000 1,500 57,000
$25 American Eagle 1/2 Oz Gold Coin 0 0 15,000 1,000 0 16,000
$10 American Eagle 1/4 Oz Gold Coin 0 0 20,000 0 0 20,000
$5 American Eagle 1/10 Oz Gold Coin 0 0 85,000 10,000 0 100,000
$50 American Buffalo 1 Oz Gold Coin 0 500 23,500 6,000 500 30,000
$1 American Eagle 1 Oz Silver Coin 0 100,000 4,017,500 2,157,500 0 6,175,000

 

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Seth Riesling

Mike Unser & CoinNews readers FYI – I have been posting comments on this coin website for at least 5 years. I have stated before that the name I use is my pseudonym due to security concerns as a collector & investor of rare coins & precious metals for 43 years involved in the tripartite numismatic hobby, industry & science. I enjoy this forum & the freedom of speech it affords readers. The exchange of opinions is a good exercise of that freedom we all have. For full disclosure, I worked in the hobby full-time as a public relations manager… Read more »

joera

Seth I have nothing but respect for you and I hope you will continue to post on this forum for a long time. I know no one knows everything about any one thing or everything. We all have opinions on many things but we do not have the knowledge on everything. Some know more than others and some think they know more than everyone else. Knowledge and opinion are not the same thing. We learn or teach knowledge but an option is one’s own and not fact. I read to get knowledge and also to listen to opinions. I respect… Read more »