FWN: 140012 CT NY Precious Metals Review:platinum, Palladium Extend Fri Rally Jul. 17-MAR-- [B] NY Precious Metals Review:Platinum, palladium extend Fri rally By Melanie Lovatt, BridgeNews New York--July 17--NYMEX platinum and palladium futures extended last week's rally, climbing throughout the day to finish at sharply higher prices. While part of the rally was fueled by speculators jabbing around in thin market conditions, the overriding impetus for the climb remains strong physical demand coupled with concern over supplies from Russia. * * * October platinum ended up $15.80 or 2.8% at $574.50 per ounce, which is a contract high and its highest level in two weeks on continuation charts. It is also just short of the $574.90, or 11-year high, that platinum made at the end of June. September palladium settled up $21.60 or 3.2% at $708.25 per ounce after jumping to a 4-month high of $710. Traders said that locals and funds pushed up platinum and palladium, with the upside extended amid thin volume conditions. "There was demand on the London fixes and nobody waiting to sell the stuff," commented one trader. While futures trade may be thin, platinum and palladium are nevertheless continuing to see good consumer-driven physical demand, agreed traders and analysts. "People are having a hard time finding product and when they find it, they pay up for it, which is keeping the spot market supported and driving the futures market," said David Meger, senior metals analyst at Alaron Trading. Some traders noted that there had been some considerable interest overnight out of Japan, pointing out that Russia's mining giant, Norilsk, had not yet made good on a statement a couple of weeks ago that it would soon deliver platinum. "It ran up overnight in the Far East and I don't believe Russia will make deliveries," said Leonard Kaplan, president at Prospector Asset Management. One traded agreed, pointing out that the "withholding of supply" is continuing to plague the market, as it has done over the past couple of years. He noted that platinum consumers had returned some leases and bought back some metal, helping to extend the rallies. However, lease rates slipped with platinum 1-month seeing 25-30%, down 10% from last week's levels. Some traders also pointed out that bids on 1-month platinum lease rates were even lower than 25%. Probably contributing to softer lease rates was the incursion of some Russian platinum into the market about 1 1/2 weeks ago. While it temporarily appeared to dent prices, it was "swallowed up by a hungry market," commented one trader. Estimates on how much Russian platinum was delivered range from 200,000 to 500,000 ounces, although players seem uncertain as to where the metal came from. Most suggested that it was not the metal earmarked for Japan. "I think it's mostly spot stuff that hit the fix or was sold over-the-counter," said one trader. Others suggested it was material from Zurich that had already appeared in import statistics. In TheBullionDesk.com's weekly report, Ross Norman noted that while some clarification is needed on the Russia situation, "the main point remains, the market is operating very much hand to mouth and the supply chain is non too reliable." He said that assuming that Johnson Matthey are correct in their belief that Russia sold 540,000 ounces of platinum in the first quarter of last year, it is likely that the remaining stockpile in Russia is 160,000 to 360,000 ounces. While most players agreed that demand for both platinum and palladium remains strong, they said that the moves up are being exacerbated by speculative buying. Some traders are questioning how long such strong prices can continue, with one noting that palladium was already looking "a bit toppy" and seeing a pullback in consumer interest at Monday's $710 high. Alaron's Meger sees platinum staying well-entrenched within its recent range of $530-570, with $580 representing resistance. However, in the immediate term he sees it taking out the 11-year high it made two weeks ago. Meanwhile, August gold settled up $2.30 at $284.20 after reaching a 5-day high of $284.80. It climbed on short-covering after last week's dip to a 1 1/2 month low following bearish U.K. gold auction results. Silver remained a slave to the rest of the complex, following the other precious metals higher, but without much enthusiasm. September settled up 1.5 cents at $5.065 per ounce after scraping its way to $5.09, its highest level in just over two weeks. SETTLEMENT PRICES --Aug gold (GCQ0) at $284.2, up $2.3; RANGE: $281.7-284.8 --Sep silver (SIU0) at $5.065, up 1.5c; RANGE: $5.055-5.09 --Oct platinum (PLV0) at $573.5, up $14.8; RANGE: $561-574.5 --Sep palladium (PAU0) at $708.25, up $21.6; RANGE: $689.9-710 SPOT PRECIOUS METALS PRICES: New York 1520 ET London 1155 BST Tokyo 0630 GMT Gold(KRCGL) 283.20-283.90 282.00-283.00 282.00-282.50 Silver(KRCSL) 4.99-5.03 4.98-5.02 4.98-5.00 Platinum(KRCPL) 570.00-578.00 575.00-583.00 570.00-577.00 Palladium(KRCPA) 695.00-710.00 695.00-705.00 680.00-690.00 End
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