Gold slips as dollar, stocks dent appeal
Gold fell yesterday as rebounding stock markets dimmed the metal’s appeal and the bearish outlook was bolstered by dollar strength and a bullish US interest rate outlook. Spot gold shed 0.3 per cent to stand at $1,185.66 per ounce by 1157 GMT, moving largely within a narrow $5 range during most of the session. The metal attracted some interest as world stocks hit eightweek lows in the previous session, but the bullion pulled back as shares staged a mild rebound on Wednesday.
“Gold has been pretty resilient to rising bond yields for the past couple of weeks. But, looks like it is starting to come under pressure from rising yields as well as a strong dollar,” ETF Securities analyst Nitesh Shah said. Rising US government bond yields can weigh on gold, as they make Treasuries attractive to investors seeking assets that earn a return as opposed to non-yielding bullion, which costs money to store and insure.
Gold has fallen over 13pc since hitting a peak in April, with investors opting for the greenback, as the US-China trade war unfolded and due to rising US interest rates. The US Federal Reserve increased interest rates last month for the third time this year and is widely expected to hike again in December, with no suggestion its tightening policy will end any time soon.
Gold has held in a $34 range for the last 1-1/2 months, with support at lower levels from concerns over economic growth in emerging markets and inflationary pressure from soaring oil prices. “Support for gold comes in at $1,180-$1,183 area,” said Fawad Razaqzada, an analyst with Forex.com, adding that if this level is broken, the metal could fall further to below the next support level at $1,160.
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