GOLD BULLION slipped in London trade Wednesday, dipping near 4-week lows as the Dollar rose following strong US jobs data and European stock markets rallied amid fresh "concessions" by Athens in seeking a new bail-out program from its Eurozone and IMF creditors.
The June report from private-sector
payrolls service ADP said the US economy added 237,000 jobs last month – the second highest figure this year, and 9% ahead of the average analyst's forecasts.
"All people in Greece must realise this risk," said Slovakia's finance minister Kazimir separately, that a 'no' vote on Sunday means Greek banks – closed this week as part of emergency capital controls – will never re-open using the Euro currency.
The Dollar on Wednesday pushed the Euro beneath $1.11 – a 13-year low when first reached this March – following the ADP jobs report.
Silver dipped near 3.5-month lows below $15.60 per ounce, after closing June at the lowest monthly finish in Dollar terms since August 2009.
Wholesale gold bullion prices in London held around $1170 per ounce, a four-year low when first reached last October.
"Price action is disappointing," says one Asian bullion desk in a note.
"Gold might be expected to remain in a narrow range this week, having absorbed a lot of news already."
The Greek crisis is "
in unchartered territory," says Australian bank ANZ's commodity strategist Victor Thianpiruiyam. But financial markets seem "a little more confident with the situation now," he's quoted by CNBC, wth "reassurances from Eurozone officials that the contagion risk from Greece will be relatively small, if any at all."
"The things going on in Greece," says US analyst and fund manager at Van Eck Global Joe Foster, "aren't affecting the US and they may not even affect Europe.
Share prices in Shanghai meantime closed Wednesday more than 5% lower, extending their drop over the last two weeks to more than one-fifth as reports said 'margin trading' using credit from stock brokerages continues to be unwound.