Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Hecla Mining Sinks on Silver Shaft Closing; Gold, Silver Take a Breather

Shares of Hecla Mining (NYSE: HL ) were plummeting to the tune of almost 25% on
news that the U.S. Mine Safety and Health Administration ordered closed the
mile-deep Silver Shaft at its Lucky Friday mine in Idaho to remove sand, rock
and debris that has built up as a result of a rock burst in mid-December. The
mine is expected to remain under temporary care and maintenance through years
end. Gold was slightly higher and silver marginally lower in Wednesday morning
trading, as the market appeared to be taking a breather after Tuesdays strong
showing. Eurozone sovereign debt and a weaker euro/dollar forex rate were said
to be weighing on risk assets gold and silver included as was U.S.-listed
share prices run-up to a six-month high yesterday. Sovereign debt news out of
Europe was positive, however. Bidding was strong at an auction of five-year
German government bonds, and that also sent yields lower on weaker eurozone
partners Italy and Spain. In the U.S., Federal Reserve chairman Bernanke
announced that the Fed stands ready to double down on a three-year bet to revive
the U.S. housing market thats failed thus far, according to a Bloomberg report.
Spot gold was trading some 0.3% higher at 10:30 a.m., with a bid price of
$1,637.70 per ounce and an ask price of $1,638.70. Spot gold traded as high as
$1,641.90 and as low as $1632.80. The London afternoon reference price fix came
in at $1,634.50, $2.50 per ounce lower than Tuesdays reference price, according
to Kitco market data . Spot silver was down 0.2%, bid at $29.88 per ounce with
an ask price of $29.98. The morning high as of time of writing was $30.04 and
the low was $29.51. Wednesdays reference price was set at $29.81 in the London
a.m., 12 cents per ounce higher than Tuesdays price fix. Gold prices hit a
one-month high of just under $1,647 per ounce in London morning trading before
giving back ground as the dollar rallied, according to BullionVault s London
Gold Market report. While the dollar may not see a significant correction soon,
and is likely to continue to gain against the euro as the eurozone crisis
persists, the negative effects of a stronger dollar on gold are likely to be
largely diminished in 2012, allowing the bullish macro drivers to dictate price
action once again, according to a market note from Societe Generale. Gold and
silver trusts were moving higher in Wednesday morning activity on U.S.
exchanges. The SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE: GLD ) was showing gains of nearly 0.7%.
The iShares Gold Trust (NYSE: IAU ) was up more than 0.6%. The iShares Silver
Trust (NYSE: SLV ) was up about 0.5%. Gold and silver mining ETFs were heading
lower. The Market Vectors Gold Miners ETF (NYSE: GDX ) was around 0.7% lower.
The Market Vectors Junior Gold Miners ETF (NYSE: GDXJ ) was down 0.3%. The
Global X Silver Miners ETF (NYSE: SIL ) was down nearly 1.5%. Gold mining shares
were moving lower, with Barrick Gold (NYSE: ABX ) bucking the trend by moving
higher. Agnico-Eagle Mines (NYSE: AEM ) was showing losses of more than 1.1%.
Barrick Gold was up about 0.15%. Eldorado Gold (NYSE: EGO ) was down around 1%.
Goldcorp (NYSE: GG ) was down nearly 0.3%. Newmont Mining (NYSE: NEM ) was down
around 0.15%. NovaGold Resources (AMEX: NG ) was just shy of 1% lower. Yamana
Gold (NYSE: AUY ) was down nearly 0.6%. Silver mining shares were showing
losses, though Pan American Silver (NASDAQ: PAAS ) was up sharply. Coeur dAlene
Mines (NYSE: CDE ) was moving sharply lower, down more than 1.7%. Hecla Mining
(NYSE: HL ) was down a whopping 23%. Pan American Silver was up some 1.6%.
Silver Wheaton (NYSE: SLW ) was showing losses of around 0.7%. Silver Standard
Resources (NASDAQ: SSRI ) was down more than 2.4%. As of this writing, Andrew
Burger did not hold a position in any of the aforementioned securities. Adrian
Ash of BullionVault contributed to this report.

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