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Gold

All the anxiety over the ramifications of accelerating growth in the U.S. economy was washed away today by a lower-than-expected growth in jobs in March.

The main force driving gold prices today is a peripheral fundamental, namely the strength in the dollar. Dollar goes up, gold goes down.

There are a couple of reasons why this is happening and it really has little to do with the dollar but more with the euro, which is the currency relationship through which we view gold buying and selling activities.

On rumors that physical demand for gold would be resurgent in China and Iraq, prices rebounded a bit.

This happened in spite of the fact that there was a healthy jump in the value of the dollar, which took a few bucks off the price of gold.

The equities steamroller just keeps flattening everything in sight. Of the nine exchanges across the globe, only the Nikkei in Tokyo showed any softness. That was on the weight of a drop in industrial output in the world's second-largest capitalist society.

Absent other news to bolster it, gold fell again today, as did silver.

Gold fell again today. This time it was after extremely dovish statements by Fed chairwoman Janet Yellen. It leaves us scratching our fundamental heads.