Archive for December, 2013

The global market outlook for 2014 will most likely be comprised of three main themes:

  • Modest growth;
  • Continued low inflation;
  • Weakening potential.

Meanwhile, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development (OECD) anticipates and/or recommends:

  • Revised 2013 and 2014 global growth projections (2.7% and 3.6% versus 3.1% and 4%);
  • A frustratingly vulnerable global recovery more than five years after the Lehman Brothers collapse;
  • Despite the Eurozone exiting a recession, the ECB should be looking at policies to further reduce interest rates;
  • That the Fed should keep its accommodative stance intact rather than considering the beginning of tapering.

The upside risks remain centered on capital investment – a global problem in 2013, where many corporations were long “cash” and repeatedly caught behind the investment curve.freee
More than five years after the onset of the Great Recession, consistent global growth remains elusive, prompting central banks to stick with artificially low interest rates while pumping an unprecedented infusion of cash into the financial system.
As they search for new ways to stimulate liquidity to augment the stimulus measures they’ve enacted, central bank policymakers must also fight deflation, and as expected, these are the themes that will continue to dominate the European Central Bank’s (ECB) train of thought as it has at the Bank of Japan (BoJ). Many foreign exchange (forex) participants and analysts are anticipating fiscal policy to be less of an impediment to U.S. growth in 2014. If so, it should allow the Federal Reserve to carefully navigate away from making asset purchases and reduce its massive $85-billion-a-month bond-buying program.
In 2013, the forex asset class managed to loiter within a contrived trading range policed by various central bank policies that, at times, led to a drop in both currency volume and volatility for painfully long stretches. The post-Lehman Brothers storm has now been replaced by a calmer period that continues to lack a badly needed injection of global corporate investment to help spur growth (think Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe’s third arrow problems, high unemployment in the Eurozone, and tentative U.S. growth).
There is great expectation that the U.S. and Europe will lead any rebound in the developed market. Next year, the U.S. is expected to reduce the fiscal drag (increased taxes and spending seizures) that the American economy has endured in the last few years. Hopefully, this will lead to a consensus of a real growth rate of approximately +3%. That’s a far better prospect than what’s unfolding across the Atlantic. Recent hard and soft European data would suggest a more muted and gradual recovery for the 17-member single currency bloc. In Japan where Abenomics reigns, additional monetary easing, and stimulus from Abe’s third arrow, should be capable of compensating the fiscal tightening (sales tax) Tokyo will initiate at the end of the first quarter in 2014. Japan is an export driven economy, a country that requires a weaker yen to further boost exports and economic growth. Critics of Abe’s three arrow policies are certainly wary of the fact that increasing the inflation rate to 2% may not necessarily increase consumption and economic activity. Even changes in the structure of Japan’s economy, do not necessarily mean that a lower currency may have the same effect on exports and growth. The short-yen trade has dominated many forex portfolios this past year. It has certainly been a trade of “patience,” a trade that’s expected to continue to dominate in the coming year.Currencies
In general, any stabilization in developed markets will eventually aid emerging markets, as increased demand in developed economies will soften the blow to any export deficits felt in the emerging world.
If this is what unfolds, it would be somewhat safe to assume that any improvement within the U.S., Eurozone, and Japan will complement the stabilization of China’s economy, and it should support emerging market growth next year. However, even if the cyclical outlook for emerging economies growth is pegged to improve, structural weakness is likely to persist. As a result, the spread between emerging and developed markets will probably narrow. Regarding China’s “reform package”, the focus is on how quickly China might allow productivity to rebound, as well as how it alters the orientation of growth. By any measure, China is faring best as it adjusts policy to confront the changing global outlook. The market expects steady growth to be maintained between +7.5% and +8%.
Speaking in Tongues
Monetary policy will continue to deliver effective stimulus everywhere, but nowhere is that urgency greater than in Japan and Europe. It is widely expected that Japan’s prime minister will implement new quantitative measures in 2014, while the threat of deflation may pressure the ECB to introduce negative interest rates for the first time in its tenure. The Fed is expected to begin tapering while keeping short-term interest rates low for the foreseeable future. Any central bank policy divergences will provide investment opportunities in equities, forex, and to a certain extent, in fixed-income. Central banks must continue to improve communication with the market and speak with plain language. As witnessed on a few occasions in 2013, incoherent dialogue leads to market risk.
Looking Ahead
Central banks’ monetary policies are expected to remain highly simulative and somewhat innovative in 2014. The Fed (soon-to-be under new leadership) will provide stronger forward guidance and it will reduce its monthly asset-purchase program. Other central banks will have to adapt to any move the Fed makes. With global rates remaining “lower for longer”, it would suggest more market opportunities in other asset classes like equities. However, investors have yet to experience how a Fed taper will play out.
The Fed requires the “terrible twos” to be constant before tapering will be seriously considered:

  •  U.S. growth more than +2%;
  •  Inflation greater than +2%;
  •  Nonfarm payrolls to print employment numbers in the +200k’s.

The forex market is under the impression that any notion of Fed tapering is data-dependent. This may not be wholly accurate. Reading between the “transparent” lines, it’s been suggested that U.S. policymakers are increasingly keen to pullback on liquidity and reduce the Fed’s monthly bond-buying program, with or without any noticeable improvement on the jobs front. If one digs deeper, it becomes obvious that the Fed is already discussing “concerns about the efficacy or costs of future asset purchases.” The main hurdle for the Fed to overcome has to do with communicating its intentions concisely. The steepness of the U.S. Treasury yield curve suggests that it so far has succeeded in getting its message across clearly to investors – front rates remain low, while the long-end has backed up. The Fed is required to partake in a fine balancing act – too much tightening too fast could cause an unsightly global domino effect.
Are improving fundamentals fueling an imminent withdrawal of the Fed’s loose monetary policy? Whether the Fed begins to taper its asset purchases in December or in the first quarter of 2014 doesn’t matter all that much. Many in the market do not expect the various asset classes to perform as wildly as they had when the Fed first floated the idea back in May 2013. Regardless, equities remain the global investors’ asset of choice despite assurances that stock returns will not necessarily carry-over smoothly into 2014. Others believe that the “mighty” dollar is on edge and about to wake from a two-month slumber of tightly contained range trading. Improvement in U.S. growth and the orderly move higher in Treasury yields is sure to support the dollar. This is in stark contrast to what the forex market was exposed to during the summer of 2013’s emerging market flight. During that period, investors were wide-open to volatile spikes and the relentless selling of emerging economic assets, firm in the belief that the Fed was on the cusp of reducing its quantitative easing program. The USD should be highly favored, especially against a dovish yen and Aussie next year.
On the other side of the planet, the jury remains out on Abenomics. Of the three arrows in Abe’s quiver – bold monetary easing, flexible fiscal policy, and a growth strategy aimed at bolstering the economy’s supply capacity – only the first arrow has hit the bull’s eye. Despite the yen underperforming across the board, and Tokyo distancing itself from any suggestion of currency manipulation, the market believes that another “arrow” aimed at devaluing the yen to an even greater degree will most likely need to be drawn and released in the first quarter of 2014 – if not sooner. There is a concern that directly devaluing the yen may not provide the intended impetus. A weaker domestic currency is advantageous for an export-driven economy. However, relying on a weak yen to expand economic growth can be easily and quickly trumped by Japan’s territorial and political disputes with China, an increasingly important trading partner for the island nation.
China’s Uncertain Reform Blueprint
The world’s second-largest economy is faring best as it adjusts policy to confront the changing global outlook. China’s growth prospects will be less of a concern in 2014. The reform package reportedly proposed by Communist Party General-Secretary, Xi Jinping, following the Third Plenary Session last November, will surely dominate most analysts’ thoughts next year. The success of the plan will be determined by how these policies will be executed. After decades of rapid expansion, the Chinese economy is entering a period of slower growth, and Beijing is under growing pressure to address issues that threaten further economic development and social stability. Now that the Chinese manufacturing sector has become somewhat unprofitable, it has led to less private investment – a global problem. Though the document focuses on improving China’s capacity to carry out economic and financial reforms, it remains light on details.
According to the OECD, China’s 2013 gross domestic product (GDP) was 7.7%, and the OECD expects it to achieve 8.2% next year. While Chinese economic recovery of the last 12 months is subdued when compared to recent history, money and credit growth needs to be reined in. The OECD suggests Beijing should increase social benefits, financial liberalization, and tax reform.
Nevertheless, China’s economy remains strong. What sets China apart is that it has been growing because of structural change as the government addresses its economic weakness quickly – a by-product of its political ideology. It will continue on its trajectory to become more of a middle-income country.
Emerging Markets Outlook
Aggregate emerging market growth has slowed to less than +4% in only three years. Emerging markets are predominately pressured by the slowdown in fixed-investment spending, which accounts for approximately +50% of that pullback. That said analysts believe the cyclical outlook for emerging market growth is steadily improving. Stronger growth from developed markets is expected to boost external demand, and when coupled with still-low real interest rates in most emerging countries, it should also continue to support domestic demand. Based on the International Monetary Fund’s real GDP growth forecast for 2014-15, Turkey, Mexico, Poland, the Czech Republic, Hungry, and China should be the biggest net benefiters. Of course, a stronger U.S. economy should be capable of pushing emerging markets’ real GDP growth even higher. Last summer’s intense pressure on the emerging forex market was brought about by the possibility of Fed tapering. The tightening of a loose U.S. monetary policy caused a massive backlash that saw investors and speculators dumping emerging market assets, with many seeking shelter in American assets. During this period of intense pressure, the Fed surprised the market and delayed the much anticipated tapering, in turn giving emerging markets a second life that allowed these economies to experience a relief rally. In reality, the challenges unstable emerging economies face has merely been delayed, not averted. Any emerging market countries and currencies with weak growth, structural issues, high debt, and other funding concerns will experience the pain of renewed capital market pressure when the Fed does begin to reduce its bond-buying program.
All that Glitters is Not Gold
In recent years, commodity prices have been competitively correlated with growth in emerging market industrial production. As growth slowed in these regions, so too have commodity prices, especially gold. The yellow metal will close-out 2013 in the red for the first time in 13 years. It’s no wonder that this long-time bull story will top many analysts’ 2013 financial stories of the year. With emerging market growth lagging, this has led to muted growth in overall commodity prices. This is not expected to change in 2014 – emerging market structural concerns combined with excess supply of commodities will lead to further stagnation of commodity prices. Many investors who brought gold as an inflation hedge have fared poorly. The market is losing faith in the metal as a store of value due to concerns that the Fed will reduce its asset purchases and ease the risk of accelerating inflation.gold
What may have caught many gold bugs off-guard is India. The world’s second-most populous country is to be dethroned as the biggest purchaser of the yellow metal on the planet. China will assume that status in 2014 with a consistent appetite. China has imported more than 100 tons of gold per month in the second half of 2013. For some, the Chinese demand is a case of too little, too late. John Paulson, the best-known gold bull since he started wagering on bullion more than three years ago, is backing away from his bet. Paulson made it clear to investors that he would not be adding to his gold fund because of inflation uncertainty. To date, Paulson’s fund has lost -63%. The market expects Chinese gold demand to continue to pick-up before the lunar New Year at the end of January 2014 due to a lack of alternative investment opportunities. With equities under pressure, and Chinese authorities dissuading real estate investment, gold remains a solid alternative.
However, spot gold prices continue to be dictated by U.S. economic data and monetary policy. Global investors need solid clues on what to expect on American policy direction for trade vindication.

Support 1 Support 2 Support 3 Resistance 1 Resistance 2 Resistance 3
3095
3065
3035
3160
3195
3235
STRAIT TIMES WEEKLY WRAP
OPEN
3177.87
HIGH
3197.09
LOW
3098.80
CLOSE
3114.17
CHANGE (In Points)
-62.17
% CHANGE
-1.96%
Weekly Technical view on STI
Weekly wrap of STI:
 Week starts on positive node but after some range bound movement, Index crossed its support level and fell badly below its 3 month lower level Singapore underperforming the region as fears over a possible reduction in the U.S. Federal Reserve’s stimulus dented the sentiment and U.S. job data.
Week starts @3177.87 and then it recovers some point and made week high @ 3197.09 and it faced resistance at that level and fell badly breaching all the support level and made week low below 3100 @ 3098.80 and finally closed @ 3114.17 with loss of 62.17 points down by 1.96% wow basis.
Market Forecast for week ahead:
  • STI closed below its 3 months lower level after making low below 3100 mark. On the weekly graph STI traded below 50 week MA level.
  • STI given breakout from its technical pattern called symmetrical triangle and closed below this, as it was taking support its 3160 mark since long and now it traded below this level which is bearish.
  • STI crossed its 3100 mark, but closed above 3100, for the coming days if STI maintain above 3160 mark then it can be recover.
STI Resistance:
  • STI having Resistance @ 3160 and above this level it may take resistance from 3195-3235 levels.
STI Support:
  • STI having nearest support @ 3095 below this 3065-3035 will be the support area for market.
 Technical Indicators:
  • Technical indicators are in downtrend .MACD, RSI and CCI all are in down territory.

Singapore share prices opened higher on Wednesday with the Straits Times Index down 11.44 points to 3,176.23. Volume was 42.6 million shares worth S$58.1 million. Losers outnumbered gainers 67 to 35. It’s rose by noon with the Straits Times Index down 3.81 points to 3,183.86. Volume was 630.4 million shares worth S$316.9 million. Losers outnumbered gainers 199 to 81.

Market Review:
Singapore equities open flat and closed in negative numbers.
Singapore shares open @3181.90 levels which is lowest level of the day and then STI took support at this level and made day high @ 3197.09 and finally closed @ 3187.67 with loss of 1.090 points down by 0.03%.
Some 1.39 billion shares, valued at S$851.7 million were traded. Gainers numbered 166 while losers numbered 237.

STRAITS TIME LEVELS
Support 1 3160
Support 2 3145
Support 3 3125
Resistance 1 3205
Resistance 2 3215
Resistance 3 3235

Market forecast: 
STI took support at its up slopping trend line, which made by higher lows and STI closed with good gain. Also STI closed above its 50 & 200 day MA level.
As we mention in our weekly report that STI trading within a symmetrical triangle and also maintain itself to be within a formation so we can expect some recovery if it will maintain the same.
STI trading at support levels and taking halt @ 3162-3165 levels, so we can consider this level as a multiple support zone.

Support:
STI having immediate support @ 3160 level and below this level it can take support @3145-3125 will be the support zone for STI.
Resistance:
STI having immediate Resistance @3205 and above this level it may take resistance @ 3215-3235
Technical indicators:
Technical indicators MACD, RSI and CCI are turning from lower.

SILVER

Silver moved lower overnight to open at 19.70/19.75, which was also the high of the day. It then followed gold to a low of 19.25/19.30 prior to concluding the session at 19.28/19.33.

Silver had a very bad day today, closing down sharply at 19.28, taking out support in the 19.59 area (previous low). There is very little price support between here and 18.23, the low from June 2013. RSI is currently at 29, with support at the previous low of 22.42, so we can see silver sell off further before getting ‘oversold’. Resistance is at today’s high of 19.75.
 The gold-silver ratio traded higher, currently at 63.60, taking out resistance in the 63.51 area. This was the 61.8% retracement of the July-August range. We see little resistance from here until the 67.47 level, a full retracement. Support is at 62.28, the 50% Fibonacci level.
Silver plunge after stronger-than-expected U.S. manufacturing activity data reinforced expectations for an eventual reduction in Fed’s monetary stimulus.
ISM said its index of purchasing managers rose to a 31-month high of 57.3 in November from a reading of 56.4 in October.
U.S. manufacturing activity rose to a 10-month high of 54.7 in November, up from a preliminary reading of 54.3
GOLD
Gold moved lower overnight to open at 1236.25/1237.25. It briefly touched a high of 1238.25/1239.25 before retreating to a low of 1221.50/1222.50 while the dollar strengthened following strong U.S. manufacturing data prompting short selling from investors and speculators. Thereafter, the metal traded within range to close at 1222.50/1223.50.
Gold suffered a steep drop today, closing at 1222, below our support level at the major low of 1225. Now that we have broken through the bottom of the recent trading range, we can expect some acceleration to the downside. RSI is at 30, with no major support until 19.74 (previous major low), so we can see further downside before reaching ‘oversold’ levels. There is no major price support until the next low of 1180 from June 2013. Resistance is at today’s high of 1239.
Gold dropped as better-than-expected U.S. manufacturing data prompted funds and speculators to increase bearish bets on bullion.
Bullion’s losses widened after data showed the U.S. manufacturing sector expanded last month at its fastest pace in 2-1/2 years
Data this week including nonfarm payrolls, third-quarter GDP and manufacturing PMI may provide more insight into the strength of the world’s biggest economy.
COPPER
On the Comex division of the New YorkMercantile Exchange, copper futures for March delivery traded at USD3.193 a pound during European morning trade, down 0.4%.
Comexcopper prices traded in a range between USD3.188 a pound, the daily low and a session high of USD3.215 a pound.
The March contract settled 0.45% higher on Friday to end at USD3.205 a pound.
Copper prices were likely to find support at USD3.180 a pound, the low from November 27 and resistance at USD3.225 a pound, the high from November 29..
Copper futures edged lower on Monday, as investors digesting a mixed round of manufacturing data from the euro zone and China.
China and the euro zone are major global copper consumers and manufacturing numbers are often used as indicators for future copper demand growth.
Copper dropped as upbeat U.S. economic data spurred renewed fears about the Federal Reserve trimming monetary stimulus and the dollar strengthened.
In the euro zone, data showed that the bloc’s manufacturing PMI rose to a two year high of 51.6 last month from October’s 51.3
Mine output of copper has grown by around 944,000 tonnes year-to-date, almost twice the pace of primary refined output.
CRUDE
On the New York MercantileExchange, light sweet crude futures for delivery in January traded at USD 94.17 a barrel, up 0.37%,
The Institute for Supply Management reported that U.S. manufacturing activity in November expanded at its fastest pace since April 2011, fueling optimism for more robust economic recovery down the road.
The ISM manufacturing purchasing managers’ index rose to 57.3 in November from 56.4 in October. Analysts were expecting the index to fall to 55.0.
Oil prices in Asia held onto overnight gains Tuesday built on data that showed industrial activity in the U.S. and China, the world’s largest consumers of crude, beat expectations and painted a picture of a global economy poised to demand more fuel and energy going forward.
Crude oil rose after strong manufacturing data from China and the United States, the world’s two biggest oil consumers.Oil prices found some extra support from evidence that the OPEC pumped less oil in November, mainly due to decreased production in Libya.Ongoing unrest in Libya pulled exports down to around 130,000 bpd, Deputy Oil Minister told more than 1.2 mbpd below pre-revolution supply levels.

Technical Levels

  SUPPORT 1 SUPPORT 2 RESISTANCE 1 RESISTANCE 2
GOLD 1238 1225 1258 1267
SILVER 19.70 19.42 20.15 20.32
COPPER 3.2045 3.1785 3.2555 3.2805
CRUDE 91.88 91.05 93.72 94.73
Commodity Contract S3 S2 S1 R1 R2 R3
 SILVER
Silver moved higher overnight to open at 20.03/20.08. It touched a high of 20.08/20.13 and then retreated to a low of 19.96/20.01 prior to concluding the day at 20.02/20.07.
 Silver also closed lower this month, taking the metal from the 24.49 high in September to the close of 20.02 today. RSI is approaching oversold levels, currently at 39.54 with major support at 36 from previous lows – a breach would be very bearish. The price trend is also bearish, with support at the major low of 18.22. Resistance is at the 25.10 high from August.
The gold-silver ratio is trading higher on the month at current 62.70. There is some resistance at 63.89, which is the 61.8% retracement of the move in the ratio from the 84.52 high in 2008 to the 30.51 low in 2011. Support is at 57.51, which is the 50% retracement. We are bullish the ratio.
Silver settled up on short covering after prices on month seen pressure as ongoing expectations for the Federal Reserve to soon begin tapering
Prices remained under pressure after upbeat U.S. employment and consumer confidence data released last week
U.S. data including nonfarm payrolls, third quarter GDP and manufacturing PMI will be released this week, giving more insight into the strength of the economy.
GOLD
 Gold moved higher overnight following the U.S. Thanksgiving holiday to open at 1253.00/1254.00. It touched a high of 1254.50/1255.50 on the back of a weak dollar and then declined to a low of 1250.25/1251.25 where it traded within range for most of the day due to the U.S. holiday. The metal closed the session at 1250.75/1251.75.
Gold closed lower this month at 1251, for the third consecutive month. RSI on the monthly chart is at 37.87, with some support at 34.00 from the major price low on June 28th, 2013. This gives gold some further room to fall before we reach support levels in RSI. The trend remains bearish, and we expect a test of the major low at 1180. Resistance is at the most recent significant high of 1433 from August.
Gold prices remained under pressure on signs that recovery in the U.S. economy could lead to the curbing of easy central bank money.
Prices in international gold has shed more than 5 percent in November and has lost around a quarter of its value so far this year.
Solid U.S. data over the past few weeks could bolster the case for the U.S. central bank curbing stimulus soon.
COPPER
Copper settled up 0.38% as a fresh intraday record in U.S. equities and a weaker dollar bolstered investor appetite for the economically sensitive asset. Also helping copper, daily data showed stockpiles on the London Metal Exchange fell to 423,825 tonnes, their lowest point since mid-February this year. In addition, copper stocks held by the Shanghai Futures Exchange fell 2.1 percent from last Friday. Investors were also encouraged by the first fall in euro zone unemployment in almost four years, coupled with rising prices, which gave fresh momentum to an economic recovery in the region. In an indication that copper stocks leaving LME and SHFE warehouses have not all been consumed.
Weighing on the demand outlook, a poll showed manufacturing activity in top copper consumer China probably grew at a slower pace in November as demand weakened as Beijing shifts its focus to market-based reforms.
Copper gained as a fresh intraday record in U.S. equities and a weaker dollar bolstered investor appetite for the economically sensitive asset.
Chile, produced 507,694 tonnes of copper in October, a 6.5 percent increase from the year before
Copper stocks held by the Shanghai Futures Exchange fell 2.1 percent from last Friday.
 CRUDE
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, light sweet crude futures for delivery in January traded at USD93.19 a  barrel, up 0.50%,
Last week, U.S. oil futures lost 2.23%. For November, NYMEX crude oil saw a 3.2% monthly loss, as ongoing concerns over rising U.S. inventories and increased production levels weighed.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported Wednesday that crude oil inventories last week rose by 3 million barrels to 391.4 million barrels, the most since June.
Domestic output rose to 8.02 million barrels a day, the highest level in almost 25 years.
Crude oil prices rose in early Asiantrade Monday as refiners took advantage of recent price dips.
Crude oil ended with gains as prolonged unrest in Libya kept supply worries to the fore.
Supply concerns just as winter demand for oil peaks will keep prices supported, but the outlook remains weak.
U.S. crude oil output last week exceeded 8 million bpd for the first time since January 1989, according to the U.S. EIA.
 Global Economic Data
DATE TIME DATA PRV EXP IMPACT
02.12.13 7.00P.M Fed Chairman Bernanke Speaks STRONG
02.12.13 8.30P.M ISM Manufacturing PMI 56.4 55.2 STRONG
Fed Chairman Bernanke Speaks
Description Due to speak at the National College Fed Challenge, in Washington DC;
Source Federal Reserve (latest release)
Speaker Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke;
Usual Effect More hawkish than expected = Good for currency;
FF Notes Fed Chairman Feb 2006 – Jan 2014. Fed Governor Feb 2002 – Jan 2020. Volatility is often experienced during his speeches as traders attempt to decipher interest rate clues;
Why Traders
Care
As head of the central bank, which controls short term interest rates, he has more influence over the nation’s currency value than any other person. Traders scrutinize his public engagements as they are often used to drop subtle clues regarding future monetary policy;
Acro Expand Federal Reserve (Fed);
ISM Manufacturing PMI
Source Institute for Supply Management (latest release)
Measures Level of a diffusion index based on surveyed purchasing managers in the manufacturing industry;
Usual Effect Actual > Forecast = Good for currency;
Frequency Released monthly, on the first business day after the month ends;
Next Release Jan 2, 2014
FF Notes Above 50.0 indicates industry expansion, below indicates contraction;
Why Traders
Care
It’s a leading indicator of economic health – businesses react quickly to market conditions, and their purchasing managers hold perhaps the most current and relevant insight into the company’s view of the economy;
Derived Via Survey of about 400 purchasing managers which asks respondents to rate the relative level of business conditions including employment, production, new orders, prices, supplier deliveries, and inventories;
Also Called Manufacturing ISM Report On Business;
Acro Expand The Institute for Supply Management (ISM), Purchasing Managers’ Index (PMI);

Gold futures advanced in thin trade on Friday, but prices were still set to record the worst monthly loss in five months amid growing concerns the Federal Reserve will start to taper its bond-buying program at one of its next few meetings.
Prices of the precious metal lost 5.4% in November, the biggest monthly decline since June, as solid U.S. economic data underlined expectations the Fed will begin curbing stimulus.
Gold prices have largely tracked shifting expectations as to whether the Fed would start unwinding its USD85-billion-a-month asset-purchase program by the end of the year.
On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for February delivery rose 1.01% on Friday to settle the week at USD1,250.40 a troy ounce.
Comex floor trading remained closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving Day holiday in the U.S. The February contract ended Wednesday’s session down 0.29% to settle at USD1,237.90 a troy ounce.
Gold futures were likely to find support at USD1,226.40 a troy ounce, the low from November 25 and resistance at USD1,258.20, the high from November 26.
On the week, Comex gold prices added 0.5%, amid indications of increased demand from China and as investors returned to the market to seek cheap valuations after prices tumbled to a four-and-a-half-month low earlier in the week.
Bearish sentiment on the precious metal remained intact after minutes of the Fed’s October meeting said the central bank could start scaling back its USD85 billion-a-month asset purchase program in the “coming months” if the economy continues to improve as expected.
The Fed, which holds its next meeting on December 17-18, has said the timing of its tapering depends on the health of the labor and housing markets.
Prices of the precious metal are down approximately 26% this year, heading for the first annual loss in 13 years.
Elsewhere on the Comex, silver for March delivery settled 1.78% higher on Friday to close the week at USD20.03 a troy ounce, as a weaker dollar and some bargain-buying provided support.
Comex silver prices ended Wednesday’s session down 1.06% at USD19.68 a troy ounce. Silver prices fell to a three-and-a-half-month low of USD19.62 on November 25.
March silver futures inched up 0.84% on the week, but still lost 8.8% in November, the worst monthly performance since June.
Meanwhile, copper for March delivery rose 0.45% on Friday to close the week at USD3.205 a pound, amid expectations of increased demand from top consumer China.
On Wednesday, copper futures shed 0.89% to settle at USD3.190 a pound. On the week, Comex copper prices declined 0.28%, bringing its monthly loss to 2.1% in November.

Data released on Sunday showed that China’s manufacturing purchasing managers’ index held steady at an 18-month high of 51.4 in November, compared to forecasts for a decline to 51.1.

Copper traders often use manufacturing numbers as indicators for future copper demand growth, as the industrial metal is widely used by the sector.
China is the world’s largest copper consumer, accounting for almost 40% of world consumption last year.
New York-traded crude oil futures edged higher in thin trade on Friday, as investors returned to the market to seek cheap valuations after prices fell to a six-month low in the previous session.
On the New York Mercantile Exchange, light sweet crude futures for delivery in January inched up 0.46% on Friday to settle the week at USD92.72 a barrel by close of trade.
Nymex floor trading remained closed on Thursday for the Thanksgiving Day holiday in the U.S.
The January contract tumbled to USD91.77 a barrel on Wednesday, the lowest since June 3, before settling at USD92.30 a barrel, down 1.47%.

Nymex oil futures were likely to find support at USD91.77 a barrel, the low from November 27 and resistance at USD94.69 a barrel, the high from November 26.
On the week, U.S. oil futures lost 2.23%. For November, Nymex crude oil saw a 3.2% monthly loss, as ongoing concerns over rising U.S. inventories and increased production levels weighed.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration reported Wednesday that crude oil inventories last week rose by 3 million barrels to 391.4 million barrels, the most since June.
Domestic output rose to 8.02 million barrels a day, the highest level in almost 25 years.
Concerns that the Federal Reserve will start to taper its bond-buying program at one of its next few meetings also weighed. The Fed’s stimulus program is viewed by many investors as a key driver in boosting the price of commodities as it tends to depress the value of the dollar.