Gold marks 6th weekly gain on safe-haven bids
San Francisco (July 11) Gold dipped from 3-1/2-month highs on Friday as stock markets recovered from a selloff on concerns over the health of Portugal's biggest bank, but the metal still marked a sixth week of gains.
European shares recovered following Thursday's slide, taking some upward pressure off gold, but investors remained cautious as Banco Espirito Santo attempted to reassure the market after trading in its shares was suspended.
Concerns over the financial stability of the euro zone have driven gold prices sharply higher in previous years, as investors bought the metal as a safe store of value.
Spot gold was up 0.1 percent near $1,336 an ounce, slightly off the previous day's peak of $1,345, its highest since mid-March. U.S. gold futures for August delivery settled down $1.70 at $1,337.40
"Geopolitical uncertainty and concerns of any potential contagion into Portugal's wider banking sector and indeed the euro zone's wider banking sector were clearly supporting gold yesterday," Mitsubishi analyst Jonathan Butler said.
"The longer-term trend since early June shows that there is still underlying strength in gold."
Source: CNBC