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PRECIOUS-Gold rises on China PMI data; flirts with $1,600

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Published: Monday, 1 Apr 2013 | 12:23 AM ET
By: Lewa Pardomuan

* Gold neutral in $1,590-$1,620 range -technicals

* Coming Up: U.S. ISM manufacturing index; 1400 GMT

(Updates prices, adds quotes) SINGAPORE, April 1 (Reuters) - Gold firmed on Monday, as signs that China's economic recovery was gaining traction could boost demand for commodities, but prices could be capped by worries about the debt crisis in Cyprus and the weakness of the euro against the U.S. dollar. Tension in the Korean peninsula has yet to trigger a rush in purchases from investors in Asia, but a full-scale conflict between the two Koreas could potentially boost gold's safe-haven appeal in times of uncertainty. Gold hit an intraday high of $1,600.81 an ounce and stood at $1,598.31 by 0331 GMT, up $2.14. The precious metal ended the quarter down around 4 percent after stock markets surged and the euro stayed weak against the dollar. Gold rallied to a 1-month high in March on concerns about fiscal stability in Europe after the European Union gave Cyprus an ultimatum to raise billions of euros it needs to clinch a bailout deal or face a likely exit from the currency zone. "We are in an uncertain market. Normally a strong PMI data from China would tend to draw investors towards stocks and not support gold prices, but this time we see a reverse. The North Korea tension is adding to the market uncertainty," said Brian Lan, managing director of GoldSilver Central Pte Ltd. "We see physical buying by the retail investors during price dips and this helped to support the prices should go up above $1,600. If everything goes well, it seems like gold could move on to a higher trading range. Gold should test $1,620." Premiums for gold bars were largely unchanged in Singapore at 1.20 to $1.50 to the spot prices in London.

China's factory production ran at its fastest in 11 months in March, according to the official manufacturing purchasing managers index published on Monday, though the rise to 50.9 missed market expectations of a bigger headline jump.

Tokyo gold futures <0#JAU:> gained and investors closely watched the developments in the Korean Peninsula after South Korean President said there would be strong and swift military response to any North Korean provocation. Tensions have been high since the North's young new leader, Kim Jong-un, ordered a nuclear weapons test in February, breaching U.N. sanctions and ignoring warnings from North Korea's closest ally, China, not to do so. "There was some early buying on TOCOM. It may be related to Korea, but nobody talks about it here," said a dealer in Tokyo. "Some places are still closed for holidays, so the market is quiet and the volume is thin, which exaggerates movements." The euro started the quarter on a weak note on Monday, staying near a four-month low on worries that the euro zone's rescue for Cyprus might have opened a can of worms and as Italy struggles to find a way out of its political impasse. Financial markets in Australia, Hong Kong and Europe are still closed for Easter holidays. U.S. gold futures for June were at $1,598.90 an ounce, up $3.20. Hedge funds and money managers sharply raised bearish bets on copper and trimmed net long positions in gold and silver futures and options in the week to March 26, Commodity Futures Trading Commission data showed on Friday.

Precious metals prices 0331 GMT

Metal Last Change Pct chg YTD pct chg Volume Spot Gold 1598.31 2.14 +0.13 -4.55 Spot Silver 28.17 -0.15 -0.53 -6.97 Spot Platinum 1574.24 8.74 +0.56 2.56 Spot Palladium 767.00 -2.50 -0.32 10.84 COMEX GOLD JUN3 1598.90 3.20 +0.20 -4.59 8198 COMEX SILVER MAY3 28.15 -0.18 -0.63 -6.90 4011 Euro/Dollar 1.2781 Dollar/Yen 94.01

COMEX gold and silver contracts show the most active months

(Editing by Clarence Fernandez)

 Print
*Gold neutral in $1,590- $1,620 range- technicals. SINGAPORE, April 1- Gold firmed on Monday, as signs that China's economic recovery was gaining traction could boost demand for commodities, but prices could be capped by worries about the debt crisis in Cyprus and the weakness of the euro against the U.S. dollar.

   
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