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Gold surged more than 1 percent to all-time highs on Tuesday, as more weak US economic data fuelled safe-haven buying on fears a slow economy may trigger more monetary stimulus by the Federal Reserve. Bullion appeared headed for its biggest daily gain in three months as investors also worried that the European debt crisis might spread. Silver also jumped 2.5 percent as investors perceived a growing risk of a US credit rating downgrade.
A bill to raise the $14.3 trillion US debt ceiling and avert a default got enough votes to pass in the Senate and was scheduled to head to President Barack Obama, to be signed into law. Bullion has rallied some 15 percent so far this year, and has gained more than 10 percent since the end of June when the Federal Reserve's $600 billion bond-buying program ended. The US Commerce Department reported that consumer spending slipped 0.2 percent in June for its first decline since September 2009. On Monday, another report showed factory activity cooled in June.
"With the worse-than-expected manufacturing index and personal spending data, gold is starting to factor in the need for further quantitative easing, further stimulus and more accommodative monetary policy, and that's why it's pushed into a record," said James Rife, an assistant portfolio manager at Haber Trilix Advisors, which manages $2 billion in assets.
Spot gold was up 1.4 percent at $1,640.80 an ounce by 11:52 am EDT (1552 GMT), having touched its ninth record this year at $1,640.39. US gold futures for December delivery rose $21.80 to $1,643.50 an ounce. Silver rose 2.5 percent to $40.27 an ounce.
Gold has hit record highs in dollars, euros, sterling, South African rand and Canadian dollars, indicating investors' distrust of volatile currencies. Central banks also remain buyers of bullion, with South Korea saying on Tuesday it bought 25 tonnes of gold between June and July to diversify its foreign reserves. It was its first purchase in more than a decade, boosting gold holdings to 39.4 tonnes.
"This news reiterates the fundamental view that most investors, asset managers, and even central banks hold true - that gold remains the quintessential currency hedge, a stabilising asset for portfolios, and a safe haven in uncertain economic times," said David Meger, director of metals trading at Vision Financial Markets, a futures broker based in Chicago.

Copyright Reuters, 2011

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