Gold climbs above $1,620 an ounce as euro holds ground
Gold rose above $1,620 an ounce, extending four sessions of gains, as the euro held its ground against the dollar in choppy trade ahead of Greek elections.
This week's gains were firmly underpinned by speculation that the Federal Reserve would unveil a fresh round of quantitative easing, which roughly translates into printing money, after weak retail and inflation data on Wednesday.
Spot gold was up 0.2% at $1,620.50 an ounce at 1140 GMT, while US gold futures for August delivery were up $2.10 an ounce at $1,621.50. Spot prices are up 1.6% this week, but trading is cautious ahead of this weekend's Greek elections.
Among other precious metals, silver was down 0.3% at $28.85 an ounce, while spot platinum was up 1.3% at $1,477.74 an ounce and spot palladium was up 0.2% at $618.40 an ounce.
Oil for July delivery was at $82.67 a barrel, up 5 cents, in electronic trading on the NYMX at 12:20 pm London time. It earlier fell 0.4% to $82.27. The contract slid 0.8% on Wednesday to $82.62, the lowest close since October 6. Prices are down 16% this year.
Brent oil for July settlement dropped 34 cents to $96.79 a barrel on the London-based ICE Futures exchange. The more actively traded August future fell 38 cents to $96.34. The European benchmark contract's premium to New York-traded West Texas Intermediate was at $14.12, compared with $14.51 on Wednesday.
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