Business World

Bullion slides to five-and-a-half-month low on greenback’s surge

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold on Friday fell to its lowest level since late May as the dollar surged to its highest in more than 13-anda-half years on expectatio­ns for a US rate hike next month and higher fiscal spending from US President-elect Donald Trump’s incoming administra­tion.

The dollar was on track for its best fortnight since 1988 against the yen, and hit its highest level since early 2003 against a basket of currencies, as Mr. Trump’s win stoked talk of tax cuts and fresh investment in infrastruc­ture to boost the US economy.

That weighed on gold, which is priced in dollars, sending it to its lowest since May 30 at $1,203.52 an ounce.

Spot gold was down 0.6% at $1,208.71 by 3:06 p.m. EST (2006 GMT). The 50-day moving average appeared on track to cross below the 200-day moving average above the market, potentiall­y forming a “death cross,” which technical traders often consider a bearish signal.

US gold futures for December delivery were settled down 0.7% at $ 1,208.70, after falling to $1,201.30, their weakest since mid-February.

“Given these headwinds, gold is holding its own relatively well at the moment,” Commerzban­k analyst Daniel Briesemann said. “You could easily argue for lower prices, given the sharp appreciati­on of the dollar and the sharp rise in bond yields.”

Spot prices have fallen more than 1% this week and are down by more than $130 an ounce from their post-election peak, hurt by the jump in the dollar and a surge in US Treasury yields.

US Treasuries resumed a sell- off that left benchmark yields on track to post their steepest two-week increase in 13 years.

“Benchmark global bond yields have been rising, further damaging the appeal of the noninteres­t-bearing precious metal,” said Fawad Razaqzada, technical analyst for Forex.com.

“But it is the dollar which is exerting the most pressure on the buck-denominate­d gold.”

Fed Chair Janet Yellen said on Thursday in congressio­nal testimony that Trump’s election has done nothing to change the Fed’s plans for a rate increase “relatively soon.”

Silver dropped by as much as 1.5% to $16.42 an ounce, its lowest since June 8, while platinum fell as much as 2.4% to $911, the lowest level since late February.

Palladium was up 0.03% at $ 726.70, and set for a third weekly rise on hopes that higher US infrastruc­ture spending could boost demand. —

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