Gold rose to all-time high on Thursday as investor buying
speeded up after the dollar sank and oil hovered near lifetime
peaks.
Gold rose to $992.70 an ounce before easing to trade at $991.60/992.40
at 7:08 a.m. EDT, against $981.90/982.70 late in New York
on Wednesday.
"Right now the dollar is the main driving factor behind
the move, but the gold price has risen surprisingly little
given the dollar weakness," said Walter De Wet, analyst
at Standard Bank.
Increased supply of scrap gold and a sharp drop in physical
demand because of high prices were putting a cap on the price
rally, he said.
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"If the dollar stays at this level, we might see $1,000
very soon, but if it retraces, it's going to become difficult."
The dollar hit fresh depths, hammered to a 12-year low versus
the yen and record troughs against the euro on mounting worry
about the health of the U.S. economy and financial sector.
The dollar's slide came despite remarks from U.S. President
George W. Bush on Wednesday that he would like to see a stronger
dollar and expressed concern its falling value was one cause
of soaring U.S. energy prices.
Market expectations for aggressive Fed rate cuts next week
have also continued to hamper the dollar.
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