Gold gained for the first time in five days as some investors
judged yesterday's decline to a one- month low had gone
too far given prospects that inflation will accelerate,
boosting demand for the metal as a haven.
The Federal Reserve as of March 19 lent $28.8 billion to
the biggest U.S. securities firms to try to stabilize capital
markets, in its first extension of credit to non-banks since
the Great Depression. Pumping more money into the banking
system may fuel inflation and demand for precious metals
and other commodities.
``Fundamentally, the charge forward is still there,'' Peter
McGuire, managing director at Commodity Warrants Australia,
said today in a Bloomberg Television interview. ``The time
to buy is on the dips.''
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Gold for immediate delivery gained $9.71, or 1.1 percent,
to $920.24 an ounce as of 4:26 p.m. in Tokyo. Silver for
immediate delivery gained 0.7 percent to $16.90 an ounce.
A weakening U.S. currency has also benefited gold. The
dollar has lost 16 percent against the euro in the past
year as the Fed lowered its target rate to 2.25 percent.
The central bank is cutting rates and pumping money into
the banking system to prevent the worst housing slump in
a quarter of a century and widening losses in credit markets
from tipping the economy into a recession.
The steps have also prompted concern U.S. inflation may
accelerate. Excluding food and energy costs, consumer prices
rose 2.3 percent in February.
Given the scale of gold's rally in recent years and the
pace of inflation, the precious metal ``should be at $2,500''
an ounce, on an inflation-adjusted basis, McGuire of Commodity
Warrants Australia said today. ``We think it's got a long
way to go.''
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