U.S. stock markets rose steadily through the first four days of the reporting period July 12-18, but the gains were almost wiped out on the final day of the period. The S&P 500 index was up 1.69 points to 1,221.13.
It was not a good time for the golds, with bullion prices testing support levels in the US$420-per-oz. range and lower. The big gold producers all fell:
Mid-tier gold producers were looking at comparable price drops, with
The slowly weakening silver price, now down to US$6.945 per oz., took its toll on the white metal’s producers.
Analyzing the results among the base metal stocks was a fairly simple game of spot-the-copper-producers, as the red metal rose to US$3,650 per tonne on the London Metal Exchange and US$1.5665 per lb. on the Comex in the wake of labour troubles at Grupo Mexico’s Asarco operations in the southwestern U.S.
Outside that group, share prices were mostly lower, including the Big Four.
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