* Gold holds firm after run of record highs, eyes $1,300/oz
* Dollar lifts from lows but stays under pressure after Fed
* Gold-silver ratio remains near lowest since January
(Updates prices, adds comment)
By Jan Harvey
LONDON, Sept 23 (Reuters) - Gold held near record highs on
Thursday, eyeing a breach of $1,300 an ounce, while silver
flirted with 30-year peaks as the threat of currency devaluation
lifted interest in the metals as a safe store of value.
Spot gold <XAU=> was bid at $1,290.10 an ounce at 1412 GMT,
against $1,289.60 late in New York on Wednesday. U.S. gold
futures for December delivery <GCZ0> slid 70 cents to $1,291.40.
Silver <XAG=> rose to a 2-1/2 year high at $21.21 an ounce
-- within a few cents of its highest since 1980 -- and was later
bid at $20.96 an ounce against $21.11.
Gold prices were lifted to a record $1,296.10 on Wednesday
after the U.S. Federal Reserve indicated it was open to
reintroducing quantitative easing to tackle sluggish U.S.
economic growth, knocking the dollar.
The precious metal's rally, which has lifted prices some 3.5
percent so far this month, is showing few signs of running out
of steam.
"Once we touch $1,300 it will probably stall there and there
will be some profit-taking, but it won't be extensive," said
Andrey Krychenkov, an analyst at VTB Capital.
"All the technical indicators are flashing completely
overbought, but that doesn't mean anything when you're in an
uptrend."
The dollar recovered from lows on Thursday but investors
remain wary as speculation that the Federal Reserve will soon
start printing more money drove down Treasury yields. []
The euro retreated from a five-month high versus the U.S.
unit however, stung by worry over Ireland's banking sector.
While the recovery in the U.S. currency is keeping a lid on
further gains in gold, the threat of further monetary easing is
providing good support to prices.
"Heightened fears of the currency debasement that could
result from an expanding Fed balance sheet, the potential for
the Bank of England to follow suit, and last week's yen
intervention all compound gold's medium-term allure," said UBS
analyst Edel Tully in a note.
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inflation adjusted highs, click on:
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TECHNICAL PICTURE FIRM
From a technical perspective, gold remains firm after
hitting record highs for five consecutive sessions to Wednesday.
"Spot gold has eroded the 2009-2010 resistance line and
looks to extend gains to $1,300," said technical analysts at
Commerzbank in a weekly report.
"The upper July-to-September channel resistance line also
cuts in at $1,300. According to a cycle which we have been
following since late 2008, this region should be reached by
the first week of October."
High prices curbed some physical buying, however. Indian
gold demand remained weak for a second day as prices traded near
all-time highs, though dealers said underlying buying was strong
on expectations of higher festive demand. []
On the supply side of the market, South Africa's Gold Fields
<GFIJ.J>, the world's fourth-largest gold miner, said it expects
attributable gold output for the September quarter to rise 0.9
percent to 906,000 ounces compared with the previous quarter.
It added that it was on track to achieve its annual
production guidance of 3.5-3.8 million ounces. []
Among other precious metals, silver remained well supported
after hitting another 2-1/2 year high overnight in Asia.
The gold-silver ratio -- the number of ounces of silver
needed to buy an ounce of gold -- was at 61.25 on Wednesday,
having hit its lowest since January in the previous session.
Platinum <XPT=> was at $1,626 an ounce against $1,627.10,
while palladium <XPD=> was at $535.50 against $538.25.
(Editing by James Jukwey)