By Stevenson Jacobs
AP Business Writer
NEW YORK — Gold prices tumbled to a one-month low Thursday, plunging after the dollar gained some muscle against the euro and hedge funds cashed in profits following the metal's record-setting rally above $1,000.
Gold had staged a phenomenal run before this week's decline, gaining nearly 20 percent this year as investors snapped up the metal traditionally seen as a haven during economic uncertainty and rising inflation. Gold began losing steam after Tuesday's lower-than-expected
Federal Reserve interest rate cut propped up the dollar, sparking a huge commodities sell-off from everything to copper to crude oil to grains.
"People are reducing positions. It may be a quarter-end phenomenon, it may be a scaling back for leverage but the bottom line is, people are selling stuff, and gold and commodities are getting slaughtered,” said
John Reade, analyst with
UBS AG in London.
What's recipe for weak market?
Gold for April delivery lost $25.30 to settle at $920 an ounce on the
New York Mercantile Exchange, after earlier falling as low as $904.70 — its lowest level since Feb. 19. Wednesday, gold dropped 5.9 percent, its biggest one-day loss in nearly two years and almost $100 less than its all-time high of $1,033.90, reached Monday.
"The dollar has been firming up and there's a lot profit-taking,” said
Scott Meyers, analyst with Pioneer Futures in New York. "If you couple that with falling oil and grain prices, it's a perfect recipe for a weak precious metals market.”
A stronger greenback prompts investors to sell hard assets, which are considered a hedge against inflation. It also makes dollar-denominated commodities more expensive for overseas buyers.
Still below inflation-adjusted peak
Other precious metals also traded sharply lower Thursday. Silver for May delivery fell $1.265 to $17.180 an ounce on the
Nymex, while May copper dropped 8.35 cents to $3.55 a pound.
The steep rise in precious metals has led consumers to pay higher prices for gold earrings, bracelets and other jewelry in recent months. Still, gold remains well below the inflation-adjusted high of 1980. Gold would need to reach about $2,200 an ounce to surpass its 1980 high.
Still, gold watchers predict the metal will continue its upward climb amid fears that the
U.S. is sliding toward or already in a recession, record-high crude prices and a weak dollar.