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Post-Fed scorecard: Gold at new high, other markets slide

November 4, 2009 |  2:53 pm

Gold’s latest rally powered ahead Wednesday as the Federal Reserve maintained a dovish attitude toward interest rates.

Meanwhile, the dollar, the stock market and longer-term Treasury bonds all sold off after the Fed issued its post-meeting statement, which repeated that policymakers expected to keep short-term rates low "for an extended period."

Near-term gold futures gained $2.40 to $1,086.70 an ounce, a new record closing high that lifted the year-to-date price gain to about 23%. The metal traded as high as $1,098.50 for the day, after surging nearly $31 on Tuesday on word of the Indian central bank's big purchase.

Goldbarz Not surprisingly, the likelihood of the U.S. maintaining near-zero short-term interest rates was a negative for the dollar, which helped bolster the case for gold. The euro jumped to $1.487 from $1.472 on Tuesday.

The stock market, which rallied early in the day on some relatively upbeat economic data, surrendered most of its gains in the final 30 minutes of the session -- a decline some analysts blamed on the U.S. House’s vote to speed up new limits on credit card interest rates. That slammed bank stocks. The Dow industrials closed up 30.23 points, or 0.3%, to 9,802.14, after being up as much as 156 points.

Some investors also dumped longer-term Treasury bonds post-Fed. The 30-year T-bond yield jumped to 4.40%, up from 4.33% on Tuesday and the highest since Aug. 14.

On the face of it, the markets might seem to be worried about the Fed falling behind the curve in keeping inflation subdued -- except, where do you find inflation these days, other than in asset prices? (OK, oil is a problem again lately, that is true.)

Nicholas Colas, investment strategist at BNY ConvergEx Group in New York, thinks the stock market’s disappointing action is just another sign that "it’s definitely in need of a breather here." Stocks have been struggling since peaking in mid-October as more investors have turned cautious about the near-term economic outlook.

The Standard & Poor’s 500 index, which edged up 0.1% on Wednesday to 1,046.50, is down 4.7% from its one-year closing high of 1,097.91 on Oct. 19.

"The biggest single question is, how are consumers thinking about their prospects going into Christmas?" Colas said. People may think better about their prospects if they have more faith that job cuts are ebbing -- which is why the government’s report Friday on October employment trends will be key, as usual.

As for the sell-off in the bond market, traders noted that the Treasury on Wednesday gave more details about its plan to lengthen the average maturity of the government’s debt load, which of course means issuing more longer-term debt and fewer shorter-term securities. That may have triggered some knee-jerk selling of longer-term bonds.

As I noted in this post, the trend no one would want to see take hold this month (or any month) would be rising bond yields accompanied by falling stock prices. Just something to watch.

-- Tom Petruno

Photo credit: Genaro Molina / Los Angeles Times

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