by Andrew Burger | February 9, 2012 11:49 am
Gold and silver were moving higher in Thursday morning trading. Greek government leaders reportedly have agreed to additional austerity measures that meet eurozone “Troika” requirements, and the latest weekly U.S. unemployment figures continue to show strength in hiring.
After moving lower in Asia-Pacific trading, spot gold was 0.8% higher, bid at $1,746.40 per ounce with an ask price of $1,747.40. Spot gold traded as high as $1,754.10 and as low as $1,731. The London afternoon fixed reference price came in at $1,748, $2 per ounce higher than Wednesday’s price fix, according to Kitco market data[1].
Spot silver was showing a gain of 0.7% per ounce, bid at $34.18 with an ask price of $34.28. The morning high as of time of writing was $34.55 and the low was $33.75. Thursday’s reference price was set at $33.80 in the London a.m., 57 cents per ounce below Wednesday’s reference price fix.
Greece’s deal is coming just hours ahead of an emergency meeting of eurozone finance ministers in Brussels today, and paves the way for $172 billion in emergency funding that needs to be in place before a $19 billion Greek government bond redemption March 20.
Weekly initial claims for unemployment insurance benefits fell 15,000[2] to a seasonally adjusted 358,000. The four-week moving average fell to 366,250, its lowest since April 2008. A consistent reading below 375,000 “usually signals that hiring is strong enough to lower the unemployment rate,” the Los Angeles Times reports[3].
Gold bullion prices fell in Thursday morning London trading[4] before regaining most of the lost ground and were around $1,730 per ounce at lunchtime, BullionVault reports in its London Gold Market report.
While the latest steps the ECB has taken to add to eurozone banks’ long-term liquidity — the Long-Term Refinance Operation — have successfully alleviated the strains on borrowing and lending that had been building up in the money market, its potential to fuel inflation down the line is supportive of gold and silver.
“The growing consensus among central bankers is that their experiment with QE is still working,” Fulcrum Asset Management ‘s Gavyn Davies wrote in Financial Times. “It was a shot in the dark, and a rather desperate one at that. But up to now it has had the desired effect, which is certainly a far better outcome than the alternative.”
Gold and silver trusts were moving higher in stock exchange trading.
Gold and silver mining ETFs also were moving lower higher.
Gold mining shares were moving higher mostly in tandem, though Yamana Gold (NYSE:AUY[11]) was leaning toward slight losses.
Silver mining shares also were participating in the broad-based move higher.
As of this writing, Andrew Burger did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities. Adrian Ash of BullionVault[24] contributed to this report.
Source URL: https://investorplace.com/2012/02/gold-silver-prices-gld-bullion-greek-debt-deal-mining-stocks/
Copyright ©2026 InvestorPlace unless otherwise noted.