GOLD
 Gold remained relatively unchanged overnight, opening at the 
intraday high of 1332.75/1333.75. It declined steadily as a string of 
mostly positive U.S. economic data showed a rise in pending home sales 
and consumer spending. The S&P hit a record high as the metal 
continued its decline to close at the day’s low of 1320.50/1321.50. 
After the close, the metal moved higher following news that Russia 
landed troops at a military air base in Ukraine.
Gold closed slightly lower this week at
Gold closed slightly lower this week at
1321, after three successive weeks 
higher. The weekly chart looks bullish, having formed a bottom at 1182 
in December, and reaching an intra week high in the 1345 area. Support 
is at 1301-1308, which forms a Fibonacci convergence zone. The Fibonacci
 levels represent the 50% retracement of the 2008 to 2011 uptrend and 
the 50% retracement of the September to December downtrend (at 1308). 
Resistance is at 1361, the high from November 2013. RSI is confirming 
the trend higher, and the last signal in MACD in the weekly chart was a 
buy. Lastly, the Positive Directional Movement Index (DMI) line crossed 
bullishly through the Negative DMI line.
 Gold settled flat as U.S. equities climbed, but yellow metal still
 posted monthly gain as persistent concerns about a slowdown in the U.S.
 economy boosted prices.
 Data showed the U.S. government slashed its estimate for 
fourth-quarter economic growth in the latest sign of a loss of momentum
 Gold gained in February mostly due to signs of economic weakness 
in China and the United States as well as political and economic turmoil
 in Ukraine.
 SILVER
 Silver opened at the session high of 21.36/21.41, remaining mostly
 unchanged overnight. It followed gold’s decline to close at the session
 low of 21.20/21.25.
 Silver
 closed lower at 21.20, after three up weeks. There is a downtrend off 
the April 2011 high, which currently comes in at 22.33. RSI also failed 
just above resistance in the 53 area, currently at 50.78. We will need 
to see a break up through 22.33 to attract more buyers. Support is at 
the lows of the recent consolidation in the 18.80 level.
 Silver
 closed lower at 21.20, after three up weeks. There is a downtrend off 
the April 2011 high, which currently comes in at 22.33. RSI also failed 
just above resistance in the 53 area, currently at 50.78. We will need 
to see a break up through 22.33 to attract more buyers. Support is at 
the lows of the recent consolidation in the 18.80 level.
The gold-silver
 ratio is trading higher this week at 62.53, after making a false break 
lower through its trend line last week. The new, re-drawn uptrend 
currently comes in at 61.37. Resistance is at the recent high of 65.24.
Silver settled down after Federal Reserve Chairwoman Janet Yellen 
said the bank will continue tapering its monthly bond purchases
Prices seen pressure with investors opting for the riskier equity 
assets after a couple of encouraging economic data from the U.S. with 
consumer sentiment rising
 Report showed the U.S. economy to have grown much less than initially indicated in the fourth quarter of 2013.
 COPPER
Copper
 settled down -0.55% as lingering concerns over the health of China’s 
economy and a weakening Chinese Yuan dampened sentiment. Investors were 
pondering improvement in the consumer confidence index and government 
officials’ remarks on the Ukraine crisis. 
 The
 US Commerce Department announced Friday that the 4Q GDP growth for the 
country was revised to 2.4% QoQ, lower than estimate and Q3’s growth. 
The figure raised speculations that the Fed may possibly suspend QE 
taper. In the euro zone, inflation remained stable, cooling expectation 
for monetary easing by the European Central Bank.
The
 US Commerce Department announced Friday that the 4Q GDP growth for the 
country was revised to 2.4% QoQ, lower than estimate and Q3’s growth. 
The figure raised speculations that the Fed may possibly suspend QE 
taper. In the euro zone, inflation remained stable, cooling expectation 
for monetary easing by the European Central Bank.
 In this context, the US dollar index fell to 79.772, help LME 
copper prices pare declines and finish at USD 7,012.3/mt, down USD 
18.5/mt. In the US, GDP growth for Q4 2013 was revised down to 2.4%, 
missing the 2.5% forecast.
 In other vital news, political crisis in Ukraine continued to 
upgrade. Russia’s parliament has approved President Vladimir Putin’s 
request for Russian forces to be used in Ukraine “until the 
normalisation of the political situation in the country”.
 US President Barack Obama warned Russia that it should rethink its
 military intervention in Ukraine, and US government officials said 
Obama is considering not attending June’s G8 Summit in Sochi, Russia, 
and reassessing economic relations between US and Russia. In the week 
ahead, investors will be anticipating Friday’s U.S. nonfarm payrolls 
report for an indication of the strength of the recovery in the labor 
market and the future course of monetary policy.
 CRUDE 
On the New York Mercantile Exchange,
 light sweet crude futures for delivery in April traded at 103.77, up 
1.15%, on the risk of military conflict in the Ukraine and possibility 
of continued cold weather in the United States. 
 Last week, crude futures for April settled up 0.19%, or $0.19 cents, to end the week at $102.59 a barrel.
Last week, crude futures for April settled up 0.19%, or $0.19 cents, to end the week at $102.59 a barrel. 
Oil’s gains came as the U.S. dollar fell to a three-month low 
against the euro on Friday after data showed that the annual rate of 
consumer inflation in the euro zone rose by a more-than-expected 0.8% in
 February, dampening speculation the European Central Bank will add to 
stimulus at its upcoming policy meeting.
 Meanwhile, forecasts for freezing temperatures across most parts 
of the central and northeast U.S. over the next couple of weeks boosted 
prices as well.
 Gains last week however were limited after the Commerce Department
 reported Friday that U.S. fourth quarter gross domestic product was 
revised down to an annual rate of 2.4%, from a preliminary estimate of 
3.2%. Analysts had expected a downward revision to 2.5%.
 The disappointing data added to concerns that the economic recovery has lost momentum since the end of last year.
 Earlier in the week, Fed Chair Janet Yellen acknowledged recent 
weakness in U.S. data, saying it indicates softness in the economy.
 Crude oil prices gained in Asian trade on Monday as tension between Russia and the West over the Ukraine lifted risk assets broadly.
Technical
Levels
| 
SUPPORT
   1 | 
SUPPORT
   2 | 
RESISTANCE
   1 | 
RESISTANCE
   2 | |
| 
GOLD  | 
1316 | 
1318 | 
1345 | 
1354 | 
| 
SILVER  | 
21.03 | 
20.76 | 
21.54 | 
21.69 | 
| 
COPPER  | 
3.2253 | 
3.2121 | 
3.2528 | 
3.2670 | 
| 
CRUDE
                  
    | 
101.94 | 
101.29 | 
103.10 | 
104.26 | 
Global
Economic DataTIME
   :IST                                                              
              
   
| 
DATA | 
PRV | 
EXP | 
IMPACT | |
| 
7.00P.M
                                                                     
              
    | 
Core
   PCE Price Index m/m | 
0.1% | 
0.1% | 
MEDIUM | 
| 
7.00P.M
                                                          
    | 
Personal
   Spending m/m | 
0.4% | 
0.2% | 
MEDIUM | 
| 
8.30P.M
                                                               
    | 
ISM
   Manufacturing PMI | 
51.3 | 
52.3 | 
STRONG | 
Core
PCE Price Index m/m
| Source | Bureau of Economic Analysis(latest release) | 
| Measures | Change in the price of goods and services purchased by consumers, excluding food and energy; | 
| Usual Effect | Actual > Forecast = Good for currency; | 
| Frequency | Released monthly, about 30 days after the month ends; | 
| Next Release | Mar 28, 2014 | 
| FF Notes | Differs from Core CPI in that it only measures goods and services targeted towards and consumed by individuals. Prices are weighted according to total expenditure per item which gives important insights into consumer spending behavior. This is rumored to be the Federal Reserve's favorite inflation measure, but CPI is released about 15 days earlier and tends to garner most of the attention; | 
| Acro Expand | Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE), Consumer Price Index (CPI); | 
| Source | Bureau of Economic Analysis(latest release) | 
| Measures | Change in the price of goods and services purchased by consumers, excluding food and energy; | 
Personal
Spending m/m
| 
Source | Bureau of Economic Analysis(latest release) | 
| 
Measures | 
Change
   in the inflation-adjusted value of all expenditures by consumers; | 
| 
Usual
   Effect | 
Actual
   > Forecast = Good for currency; | 
| 
Frequency | 
Released
   monthly, about 30 days after the month ends; | 
| 
Next
   Release | Mar 28, 2014 | 
| 
FF
   Notes | 
This
   is significant data, though it tends to have a relatively mild
   impact because Retail Sales, which also covers consumer spending,
   is released about 2 weeks earlier; | 
| 
Why
   Traders Care | 
Consumer
   spending accounts for a majority of overall economic activity.
   It's one of the most important gauges of economic health due to
   the vast ripple effect consumer buying creates in the economy; | 
| 
Also
   Called | 
Consumer
   Spending, Personal Consumption Expenditures; | 
ISM
Manufacturing PMI
| 
Source | Institute for Supply Management(latest release) | 
| 
Measures | 
Level
   of a diffusion index based on surveyed purchasing managers in the
   manufacturing industry; | 
| 
Usual
   Effect | 
Actual
   > Forecast = Good for currency; | 
| 
Frequency | 
Released
   monthly, on the first business day after the month ends; | 
| 
Next
   Release | Apr 1, 2014 | 
| 
FF
   Notes | 
Above
   50.0 indicates industry expansion, below indicates contraction; | 
| 
Why
   Traders Care | 
It's
   a leading indicator of economic health - businesses react quickly
   to market conditions, and their purchasing managers hold perhaps
   the most current and relevant insight into the company's view of
   the economy; | 
| 
Derived
   Via | 
Survey
   of about 400 purchasing managers which asks respondents to rate
   the relative level of business conditions including employment,
   production, new orders, prices, supplier deliveries, and
   inventories; | 
| 
Also
   Called | 
Manufacturing
   ISM Report On Business; | 
| 
Acro
   Expand | 
The
   Institute for Supply Management (ISM), Purchasing Managers' Index
   (PMI); | 
 6:02 PM
6:02 PM
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