Gold rises on oil, platinum awaits Johnson Matthey
By Lewa Pardomuan
LONDON (Reuters) - Gold rose on Friday, buoyed by firm oil prices, but investors were careful about taking large positions ahead of a raft of U.S. data, which may set the direction for the dollar and precious metals.
Platinum was also firmer amid speculation precious metals refiner Johnson Matthey (JMAT.L: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) may release another bullish outlook in its annual report on platinum group metals next week.
Spot gold rose to $884.95/885.95 an ounce from $881.55/882.75 an ounce late in New York on Thursday, when it hit a high of $887.50 on a combination of a falling dollar and rising oil prices.
"I think we're likely to see more rangebound trading, between the established $850 and $900 in the absence of a new catalyst," said Suki Cooper, precious metals analyst at Barclays Capital.
"I think the underlying fundamentals for platinum are very strong. We're likely to see another large deficit in the market this year, given the expectations for reduced supply on the back of the power problems in South Africa."
Spot platinum firmed to $2,098/2,113 an ounce from from $2,079/2,094 late in New York.
Platinum, used in jewelry and auto catalysts, powered to record high of $,2,290 an ounce on March 4 after a power crisis in main producer South Africa disrupted mining and sparked fear of a supply deficit.
In other markets, oil bounced to $125 a barrel on Friday, within sight of this week's all-time peak of $126.98, led by the bullish heating oil market as China and Europe scramble for barrels, thinning global supply. Continued...







