Business World

Gold hits one-month low, heads for third weekly drop ahead of Fed

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold fell to a one-month low on Friday, heading for a third successive weekly loss, as uncertaint­y over the timing of the US Federal Reserve’s first interest rate increase in nearly a decade weighed on appetite for the metal.

Prices are down nearly two percent last week and touched their weakest level since Aug. 11 at $1,098.35 an ounce.

Spot gold was down 0.6% at $1,104.96 an ounce at 2:37 p.m. EDT (1837 GMT), while US gold futures for December delivery settled down 0.5% at $ 1,103.30 an ounce.

Traders are awaiting the Fed’s next policy statement on Thursday for clues on the timing of a US interest rate rise before taking any big positions in gold. “People don’t want to be positioned long gold going into the meeting, more than anything else,” said Bill O’Neill, co-founder of commoditie­s investment firm Logic Advisors in New Jersey, adding that there is “an erosive market tone.”

“The market remains a very low participat­ion market from the big players. The hedge funds certainly are not looking to make major commitment­s in gold.”

Gold has benefited in recent years from ultra-low rates, which cut the opportunit­y cost of holding non-yielding bullion while weighing on the dollar, in which it is priced.

Concerns over slowing economic growth in China, mixed economic data and volatility in financial markets have increased uncertaint­y about the timing of any US rate increase, which had been expected as early as this month.

“Our house view is that they will wait until December,” Commerzban­k analyst Daniel Briesemann said on Friday last week.

“I think that will lead to continued uncertaint­y in the gold market. The market would be in better shape if the Fed said clearly next week what it was going to do.”

Two straight years of drought in India — for only the fourth time in over a century — have hit gold demand there and could cut imports by up to 10% in 2015, the head of a southern Indian regional gold federation said.

Silver was down 1.2% at $14.49 an ounce, while platinum was down 1.9% at $959.50 an ounce and palladium was flat at $587.50 an ounce. —

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