Gold slips from 4-month high
By Lewa Pardomuan
SINGAPORE (Reuters) - Gold dropped on Wednesday as speculators booked profits after the metal rose to a four-month high the previous day, while platinum fell 2 percent on fears of weakening demand for autocatalysts.
Jittery stock markets, worried about the future of U.S. mortgage lenders Fannie Mae (FNM.N) and Freddie Mac (FRE.N), record-high oil, Middle East tensions and a volatile dollar, have pushed up gold prices to a level not seen since March.
Gold fell to $970.80/971.70 an ounce from $975.90/977.90 an ounce late in New York. Gold rose to $987.75 an on Tuesday, its highest level since March 19, before a drop in oil and declines in other commodities erased some of the gains.
Gold struck a lifetime high of $1,030.80 in March.
"It's a very volatile market. I think people are more cautious about the oil prices, the dollar," said Ellison Chu, senior manager at Standard Bank London in Hong Kong.
"I think we may have a chance to see $995 or something like that. On the downside, we can still go back to $960."
Oil was little changed around $139 a barrel on Wednesday ahead of U.S. government inventory data, after tumbling more than $6 on growing concern over the United Stateseconomy stirred demand worries.<O/R>
The euro dipped to $1.5907, off a record high of $1.6040 hit the previous day. Continued...



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