Platinum Rallies Back to $1250

Platinum slid below $1,200 an ounce for the first time in five years and money managers cut bullish bets by the most since 2012 on concern demand is slowing from Europe to China as the appeal of precious metals wanes.

Hedge funds and other speculators reduced their net-long position in New York platinum futures and options by 26 percent in the week ended Sept. 30, the most since May 2012, U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data show. Speculators cut wagers on higher prices 70 percent from a record in July and are now the least bullish this year. The metal last traded little changed after falling as much as 2.8 percent earlier today.

Prices fell 12 percent last quarter after a five-month mine strike ended in June in top producer South Africa and on concern that slowing growth in China and Europe will curb demand for the metal used in catalytic converters and jewelry. Investors are losing faith in the commodity as an accelerating U.S. economy adds to the case for rising interest rates and strengthened the dollar. That curbs precious metals’ allure because they generally only offer returns through price gains.

Bloomberg

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