Gold prices slipped to start the week, pressured lower by traders who made bets the precious metal would fall.
Gold for February delivery fell $3.70 to settle Monday at $1,652.90
an ounce. Gold prices have dropped 1.3 percent so far this year.
Options on the New York Mercantile Exchange’s Comex exchange expire
Monday. Many of the traders who had previously placed bets that gold
would fall through options contracts known as ‘‘puts’’ are closing out
those bets and taking their winnings off the table. That can knock
prices lower.
With the exception of copper, other metals were also lower:
— Silver for March delivery fell 42.6 cents to $30.78.
— Platinum for April delivery fell $32.70 to $1,662.20.
— Palladium for March delivery fell 45 cents to $740.55 an ounce.
In grain futures, corn for March delivery rose 8.50 cents to settle
at $7.29 a bushel Monday. Corn prices have surged 4 percent so far this
year. A government report out earlier this month showed that farmers
harvested much less corn last year than anticipated. It also revealed
that the country’s stockpile of corn, used as food for cattle and other
farm animals, dropped to the lowest level in nine years as of Dec. 1.
http://www.boston.com/business/markets/2013/01/28/gold-sinks-traders-unwind-option-contracts/kjWOa7C9l7DCedLv8Ub89M/story.html
http://www.boston.com/business/markets/2013/01/28/gold-sinks-traders-unwind-option-contracts/kjWOa7C9l7DCedLv8Ub89M/story.html
Nice post, For active gold traders, the bottom line is the cost of trading. Cut your commission fees to the minimum, and you're half way there. Gain direct access to the "spread" – the gap between the price to buy and the price to sell – and you can then enjoy a negative cost per trade.
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