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Eagle Royalties Ltd T.ER


Primary Symbol: C.ER Alternate Symbol(s):  ERYTF

Eagle Royalties Ltd. is engaged in holding royalty assets. The Company holds royalty interests in approximately 35 mineral exploration projects in western Canada. These projects are being explored for commodities that include gold, silver, critical metals, uranium, rare-earth elements, diamonds and industrial minerals. The Company’s portfolio includes the flagship AurMac (McQuesten) Royalty that overlies a portion of Banyan Gold Corp’s gold discovery at their AurMac Property located in the central Yukon Territory. Its Schott's Lake Royalty, George Lake Royalty and Knife Lake Royalty are situated in Saskatchewan, Canada. The Eskay Creek Royalty is situated in British Columbia, Canada. Its other royalties include Acacia, Adamant, Albert Lake, Axis Lake, BC Mas, Beaven, Black Diamond, Black Water Regional, Brownell Lake, Cathro, Coyote Creek, Cup Lake, Elsiar, East Goldfield, Fort a la Corne, Dianne Lake, Hanson North, Hot Punch, Hunter Basin, Manson Bay South, Kalum and more.


CSE:ER - Post by User

Post by 20/20/12on Aug 27, 2017 2:57am
185 Views
Post# 26625716

Gold markets shaken from slumber

Gold markets shaken from slumber https://beta.theglobeandmail.com/globe-investor/inside-the-market/market-updates/gold-markets-shaken-from-slumber-by-2-million-ounce-trade/article36089015/

After weeks of relative slumber, gold traders were rudely awoken to a surge in volume and volatility.

Leonhard Foeger/REUTERS

So much for a quiet Friday in late August.

After weeks of relative slumber, gold traders were rudely awoken to a surge in volume and volatility. In a span of one minute, 21,256 gold futures contracts, equal to more than 2 million ounces, traded just before Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen addressed a gathering of policy makers in Jackson Hole, Wyoming.

The episode jolted the market after a measure of 60-day volatility on the metal touched the lowest since 2005. Gold had been in quiet mode even amid political discord in Washington, concerns about rising U.S. interest rates and tensions between the U.S. and North Korea. Yellen's speech, which lacked clear rate cues, did little to calm the price swings and damped expectations of a rate hike this year.

 

The market is "bipolar," Bob Haberkorn, a senior market strategist at RJO Futures, said by phone. "Between now and the end of the year, the story is going to be the Fed. The Fed was pretty hawkish coming into the year. Now it feels like they are backing away from September."

Gold futures for December delivery rose 0.4 per cent to $1,297.20 an ounce at 12:38 p.m. on the Comex in New York, after falling as much as 0.8 per cent and climbing 0.7 per cent to briefly pierce the $1,300 threshold.

 

Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas President Robert Kaplan may have helped fuel the sharp move before Yellen's speech by saying the central bank can afford to be patient on raising interest rates even while noting it should shrink the balance sheet soon.

"Kaplan was dovish and sent it higher," Robin Bhar, an analyst at Societe Generale AG, said by phone Friday. "I don't know if anyone then got wind of what Yellen was going to say, but it then dropped like a stone. And then, when she didn't mention monetary policy, things started to stabilize again."

"These are crazy markets, and very difficult to trade," Bhar said of Friday's gold moves. "The net result was extreme volatility."

Base metals also fluctuated Friday. Copper on the Comex dropped 0.2 per cent to $3.051 at 12:42 p.m, after it fell as much as 0.5 per cent and rose 0.7 per cent. The metal is still on track for a seventh weekly climb, which would be the longest stretch of such gains since 2009.

"If you look at the chart, it just exploded to the upside," Peter Thomas, senior vice president at Zaner Group LLC, said of the copper futures trading. A few minutes later, "we came right back down. It was insane."

 

On the London Metal Exchange, copper slipped 0.3 per cent after advancing as much as 0.8 per cent, while the five other main metals also fell.

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