Gold and silver were moving lower along with stocks Thursday morning despite a positive report on December unemployment and private sector hiring, along with healthy bidding at an auction of French treasury bonds. Disturbingly, the yield on Italy’s benchmark 10-year bond moved back above , according to a Wall Street Journal report.
Spot gold was trading 0.5% lower Thursday morning, with a bid price of $1,604.40 and an ask price of $1,605.40. Spot gold traded as high as $1,613.50 per ounce and as low as $1,596. The London afternoon reference price fix came in at $1,599, $14 lower than Wednesday’s price fix, according to .
Spot silver was down some 0.86%, bid at $28.91 per ounce with an ask price of $29.01. The morning high as of time of writing was $29.23 and the low was $28.63. Thursday’s reference price was set at $28.92 in the London a.m., 26 cents per ounce lower than Wednesday’s price fix.
Closing out 2011 strong, the headline seasonally adjusted insured unemployment rate for fell 0.1% from the previous week to 2.8%, the Labor Department reported. Initial claims for unemployment fell to 372,000 last week, a drop of 15,000 from the revised figure from two weeks ago. The four-week moving average fell to 373,250, a drop of 3,250 from the previous week’s revised average of 376,500.
Seasonally adjusted non-farm private sector employment rose 325,000 month-over-month in December, according to the latest ADP National Employment Report, which was released this morning. November’s estimated increase was revised down slightly, from 206,000 to 204,000.
Gold bullion reached a two-week high of $1,625 per ounce in Thursday before dropping back to $1,609, according to BullionVault‘s London Gold ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ report. “We believe that gold prices will recover in 2012, and we maintain our bullish posture,” HSBC analyst James Steel said, despite cutting his average 2012 forecast from $2,025 to $1,850 per ounce this week.
On the exchanges, gold and silver trusts were heading lower.
- The SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE:) was showing losses of around 0.2%.
- The iShares Gold Trust (NYSE:) was down more than 0.1%.
- The iShares Silver Trust (NYSE:) was down around 0.7%.
Gold mining ETFs were falling as well.
- The ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:) was about 0.5% lower.
- The ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:) was down nearly 2.6%.
- The Global X Silver Miners ETF (NYSE:) was around 0.8% lower.
Gold mining shares were broadly lower, Agnico-Eagle Mines (NYSE:) the exception.
- Agnico-Eagle Mines was showing gains of some 0.6%.
- Barrick Gold (NYSE:) was down about 0.25%.
- Eldorado Gold (NYSE:) was down some 0.5%.
- Goldcorp (NYSE:) was more than 0.7% lower.
- Newmont Mining (NYSE:) was unchanged.
- NovaGold Resources (AMEX:) was down 1% and more.
Silver mining shares also were heading south.
- Coeur d’Alene Mines (NYSE:) was moving lower, down more than 1%.
- Hecla Mining (NYSE:) was down more than 1.7%.
- Pan American Silver (NASDAQ:) was down some 0.6%.
- Silver Wheaton (NYSE:) was showing losses of around 0.6%.
- Silver Standard Resources (NASDAQ:) was down nearly 1.2%.
As of this writing, Andrew Burger did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities. Adrian Ash of contributed to this report.