Montreal Gazette

Gold prices plunge on weak growth in China

- HUGH MCKENNA THE CANADIAN PRESS

TORONTO — Gold prices plunged to their lowest level in more than two years Monday, accelerati­ng a months-long trend and taking the glitter off investment­s in both bullion and the mining companies that produce it.

On the New York Mercantile Exchange, June gold futures closed down $140.30 at $1,361.10 U.S. an ounce in the biggest one-day percentage drop since at least February 1983.

At that, the precious metal was still $6 above its worst levels of the day following a $63 drop on Friday. Monday’s settlement level was the lowest since February 2011.

Bullion’s fall was reflected by gold stocks, with some well-known names again trading sharply lower after big declines last week, with the sector as a whole declining more than eight per cent Monday.

Shares in Barrick Gold Corp continued to be among the hardest hit, falling $2.64, or 11.51 per cent, to $20.30 on volume of more than 11 million shares, the most on the Toronto Stock Exchange. The issue lost about 15 per cent of its value last week and now is at its lowest price in about a decade.

The massive drop in bulli on prices came amid a general meltdown for commoditie­s such as oil, down $2.58 at $88.71 U.S. a barrel, and copper, off eight cents at $3.27 U.S. a pound, following data that showed weakerthan-expected economic growth in China.

Commenting on the “collapse” of gold prices, Scotiabank chief foreign currency strategist Camilla Sutton said in a commentary there are worries of forced liquidatio­ns of gold inventorie­s.

“Potential European Central Bank selling combined with two major banks issuing sell recommenda­tions last week seem to have sparked the sell-off,” Sutton noted.

There has been speculatio­n that Cyprus may sell a chunk of gold reserves to finance its part of a fi- nancial rescue. Though that may not materializ­e, it was enough to prompt some investors to think that a gold-selling strategy may be used elsewhere in the troubled eurozone.

Among other gold miners on the Toronto exchange, Osisko Mining Corp was down a whopping 21 per cent at $4.04 on volume of 10.5 million shares, making it the second most active issue after Barrick.

Goldcorp, which has taken over from Barrick as the leading gold miner by market capitaliza­tion as its stock has been less severely punished in the recent slide, was down 5.6 per cent Monday at $28.38.

That reduced its market capitaliza­tion to $23 billion, down from $24.4 billion on Friday but now above Barrick’s equity value of about $20.3 billion.

Also suffering punishing losses were Kinross Gold, down 13.5 per cent at $5.54; Torex Gold, down 12.5 per cent at $1.26 and Yamana Gold, down more than eight per cent at $12.15.

The precipitou­s drop in gold prices has taken it from above $1,600 just 10 days ago and there is talk in the markets that a number of institutio­ns are cashing in following a reduction in gold price prediction­s from leading investment banks — including Goldman Sachs.

Last week, Goldman Sachs lowered its average gold price forecast for 2013 to $1,545 an ounce, although it fell well below that level in Friday’s rout alone.

Another possible reason for the drop in gold is that the U.S. Federal Reserve will outline a strategy to withdraw its monetary stimulus later this year despite recent mixed signals out of the U.S. economy.

One of the reasons why the price of gold has been so strong in recent years has been a direct result of the Fed’s policy — the new dollars created under so-called quantitati­ve easing have found themselves recycled in financial markets, and many of them have gone to the perceived haven of gold.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? On the New York Mercantile Exchange, June gold futures closed down $140.30 at $1,361.10 U.S. an ounce.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS On the New York Mercantile Exchange, June gold futures closed down $140.30 at $1,361.10 U.S. an ounce.

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