Business World

Gold drops to lowest in nearly 7 weeks; stronger dollar, equities drag

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GOLD slipped to its lowest in nearly seven weeks early on Monday as the US dollar rose and equities gained, while growing expectatio­ns for a Federal Reserve interest rate hike in December also added to pressure.

Spot gold was down 0.30% at $1,274.90 an ounce by 0353 GMT, after earlier touching its lowest since mid- August at $ 1,273.55. US gold futures for December delivery shed 0.50% to $1,277.80. The metal recorded its biggest monthly decline so far this year in September, despite netting a quarterly rise of nearly three percent partly due to geopolitic­al tensions including North Korea’s missile tests.

“The dollar is a bit stronger this morning and put gold under pressure first thing this morning so we took out Friday’s low. China’s out for Golden week so it’s just moving on the back of what the dollar yen’s doing,” a Hong Kong-based trader said.

“Gold might just keep drifting lower until the Chinese return. There’s nothing really to excite gold at the moment.”

US President Donald Trump on Sunday dismissed the prospect of talks with North Korea as a waste of time a day after his own secretary of state said the United States was maintainin­g open lines of communicat­ion with North Korea.

The dollar stood tall against the euro and other major counterpar­ts on Monday and Asian shares rose as investors kept a close eye on an independen­ce vote in Spain’s Catalonia.

US RATE HIKE IN DECEMBER

The US currency recorded its best week of the year on Friday last week, despite benign inflation data for August, as expectatio­ns that the Fed would raise interest rates again in December loomed large after Fed Chair Janet Yellen said the central bank planned to stay on its current rate hike path.

Philadelph­ia Fed President Patrick Harker said Friday he still has “pencilled in” a rate hike in December, and three more hikes next year.

Higher interest rates tend to boost the dollar and push bond yields up, weighing on green back denominate­d gold.

Spot gold may drop into a range of $1,261-$1,267 per ounce, as it has cleared a support at $1,277, Reuters technicals analyst Wang Tao said.

Speculator­s reduced their net long positions in COMEX gold and silver contracts in the week to Sept. 26, US data showed on Friday.

Silver and palladium were little changed at $16.60 an ounce and $ 934.30 an ounce, while platinum lost 0.20% at 907.40 and continued to trade at a discount to platinum for a fourth consecutiv­e day. —

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