Gold and silver were lower Friday morning on positive eurozone news, German business confidence and strong earnings reports in the U.S. Spot gold was down 0.12%, bid at $1640.60 as of 11:06 a.m., having traded as high as $1647.60 and as low as $1,637.10 an ounce, according to . The London afternoon reference price was set at $1,641.50, $$8.50 an ounce lower than Thursday’s afternoon reference price.
Spot silver was showing a 0.44% loss, bid at $31.66. The morning high as of time of writing was $32.01 and the low was $31.49. Friday’s reference price was set at $31.79 an ounce in the London a.m., 32 cents an ounce above Thursday’s price fix.
On the earnings front, industrial bellwether slightly better-than-expected Q1 revenue and profit, with analysts noting organic growth in its energy business as a positive sign. First-quarter earnings at Fortune 500 peer on strong revenue and improved profitability.
Gathering in Washington, D.C., for this weekend’s , emerging market BRIC country leaders (Brazil, Russia, India, China) are ready to contribute at least an additional $100 billion to meet the IMF’s goal of doubling its capital base. The IMF already has commitments of $320 billion in hand.
Ifo Institute’s beat expectations in April, keeping a string of better-than-expected readings alive by rising for a sixth consecutive month, to 109.9 from 109.8 in March. Germany’s economic think tanks — Munich-based Ifo Institute included — yesterday raised their prediction for 2012 German economic growth 1/10 of a percentage point, to 0.9%, and to 2% for 2013.
China economists are on central bank watch, anticipating that the People’s Bank of China will .
Gold bullion prices dropped as low as $1,640 an ounce in relatively flat trading Friday morning in London, BullionVault reported in its .
“Overall, the price action since the February high of $1,790 has been quite weak,” BullionVault quoted the latest technical analysis from Gold Bullion dealing bank Scotia Mocatta. “We would expect liquidation selling of gold below $1,600. We do not see fresh buying emerge until we can reclaim the $1,700 level.”
Gold and silver trusts were flat to lower in U.S. stock exchange trading Friday morning.
The SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE:) was up and down around flatline.
The iShares Gold Trust (NYSE:) was flat as well.
The iShares Silver Trust (NYSE:) was down more than 0.1%.
Gold and silver mining ETFs were mixed, with the major gold miners ETF lower, the junior gold miners ETF higher and the silver miners ETF flat.
The ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:) was showing losses of around 0.5%.
The ÃÛÌÒ´«Ã½ Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:) was up around 1%.
The Global X Silver Miners ETF (NYSE:) was moving around the unchanged level.
Gold mining shares were turning in a mixed performance, with Barrick Gold leading the way higher.
Agnico-Eagle Mines (NYSE:) was showing losses of more than 0.7%.
Barrick Gold (NYSE:) was down around 1.3%.
Eldorado Gold (NYSE:
) was around 0.4% lower.
Goldcorp (NYSE:) was showing gains of some 0.3%.
Kinross Gold Corp. USA (NYSE:) was around 0.6% lower.
Newmont Mining (NYSE:) was moving around the unchanged level.
NovaGold Resources (NYSEAMEX:) was up more than 1%.
Yamana Gold (USA) (NYSE:) was up some 0.4%.
Silver mining shares also were mixed.
Coeur d’Alene Mines (NYSE:) was showing losses of 0.7%.
Hecla Mining (NYSE:) was up nearly 1%.
Pan American Silver (NASDAQ:) was showing gains of around 0.6%.
Silver Wheaton (NYSE:) was down less than 0.1%.
Silver Standard Resources (NASDAQ:) was down less than 0.1%.
As of this writing, Andrew Burger did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities. Adrian Ash of BullionVault contributed to this report.