^ I would have agreed than I started hearing this stuff out of the blue.
Nadler's Nuggets: An emergency Fed meeting?
By Jane Louis
20 Nov 2007 at 09:14 AM
St. LOUIS (ResourceInvestor.com) â In this morning's update, Jon Nadler of Kitco Bullion Dealers said spot gold gained $12 to open at $788.50 per ounce following speculation that the U.S. Federal Reserve will call an emergency meeting:
"Bullion prices staged a more robust recovery overnight, as rumours of an emergency Fed meeting swirled in the markets and as the U.S. dollar took a fresh nosedive against the euro. Crude oil prices gained more than a dollar, climbing towards $96 and lent a helping hand to gold's first solid bounce in four days. Participants remain on alert for fast-changing conditions as the market is thought to still have a negative bias that could have it conceivably breach $750 in the not too distant future. Trading is expected to wind down in the latter half of today's and during most of tomorrow's pre-holiday sessions.
"New York spot gold opened at $788.50, gaining $12.00 and offsetting Monday's losses but resistance emerged just above $790 as the Fed meeting rumor started to lose traction in various market circles. Additional dollar-negative sentiment came to gold's assistance as speculation mounts about a possible OPEC switch in oil pricing away from the US dollar and into a valuation based upon a basket of currencies."
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Asian Markets Rally Off Lows on Rumors of Emergency Fed Meeting
11-20-2007 07:20:01 AM
More General News
Asian markets rallied sharply off their lows, to close positive, on rumors the US Federal Reserve would call an emergency meeting to cut interest rates.
The Hang Seng closed up 1.1%, after recovering more than 1,300 from the lows. The Shanghai index also recovered from the lows, closing the day 0.5% higher.
Many market participants dismissed the Fed talk, but traders say the rumors could have driven shorts to cover their positions
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CNNMoney
Forex - Dollar falls to new euro low as rumours swirl ahead of FOMC
November 20, 2007: 04:33 AM EST
LONDON, Nov. 20, 2007 (Thomson Financial delivered by Newstex) -- The dollar weakened sharply against major currencies, falling to new all-time lows against the euro and the Swiss franc, as vague rumours of an emergency meeting of the Federal Open Markets Committee added to further speculation that Gulf economies could abandon their dollar peg.
Meanwhile, ongoing fears over the US economy, linked to turbulence in financial markets and a flagging US housing market, provide a longer-term, underlying reason for the dollar's weakness.
Vague rumours have circulated around the market this morning of an emergency meeting of the FOMC, the US Federal Reserve's rate-setting body.
'There were rumours of an emergency rate cut from the Fed tonight in the Asia session, which is likely to keep the dollar in a shaky mood,' said Audrey Childe-Freeman at CIBC World Markets...
http://money.cnn.com/news/newsfeeds/articles/newstex/AFX-0013-21110183.htm
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Seriously, where did all this emergency rate cut rumors originate from?