US gold barely up

29 Sep, 2010

US gold futures finished Monday barely higher, after nearing its record high in early trade, but volumes were light and some investors were beginning to take profits after the psychologically potent $1,300 per ounce target was breached, analysts said.
COMEX December gold futures ended 50 cents higher at $1,298.60 an ounce on the COMEX division of the NYMEX. Range ran from $1,295.80 to $1,301.30. The contract high was a touch below the record at $1,301.60 set on Friday. COMEX estimated final gold volume at 76,294 lots, down about 28 percent from the 30-day average. Gold bullion edged up to a record $1,300 per ounce in European trade, a hair higher than the previous top at $1,299.95 set on Friday. By 3:30 pm EDT (1930 GMT), spot gold changed hands at $1,297.15 an ounce, up slightly from the prior closing bid at $1,295.60 an ounce.
COMEX December silver ended up 7.2 cents at $21.4710 an ounce, as investors sought a cheaper alternative in gold's run up. Higher range spanned $21.3650 to $21.6450 an ounce, the contract's highest since March 2008. COMEX estimated final volume at 24,337 lots, off about 40 percent from the 30-day average. Spot silver climbed to $21.47 in late New York dealings, against $21.41 previously. London silver was fixed higher at $21.54 an ounce.
NYMEX October platinum settled $9.70 lower at $1,630.10 an ounce. Spot platinum slipped to $1,630.50 an ounce, off Friday's close at $1,637.70 a tonne. NYMEX December palladium ended with $8.30 losses at $552.20 an ounce, moving down with platinum. Spot palladium fell to $549.50 an ounce from $556.70 an ounce late on Friday.

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