Business World

Gold touches 2-week high but US interest rate expectatio­ns cap gains

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold touched its highest in nearly two weeks on Tuesday, supported by a softer dollar and geopolitic­al tensions in Spain and North Korea, though gains were capped by expectatio­ns of another US interest rate increase.

Investors were particular­ly wary on Tuesday as Pyongyang celebrated the founding of its ruling party, a day after Russia and China both called for restraint on North Korea following a Twitter post from US President Donald Trump hinting that military action was on his mind.

In Spain, the leader of Catalonia’s government called for a reduction in tensions in its standoff with Madrid over a bid in the wealthy northeaste­rn region for independen­ce.

The dollar index fell, Wall Street stock indices scaled new records and US Treasury yields dropped.

“The Fed is going to raise rates, so we see gold breaking out of the (current) range down to the $ 1,250 level, with geopolitic­al tensions supporting the downside,” said Societe Generale analyst Robin Bhar.

Spot gold was up 0.50% at $ 1,289.81 an ounce by 1: 53 p. m. EDT (1753 GMT), having touched its highest since late September at $1,294.25. US gold futures for December delivery settled up 0.70% at $1,293.80.

“The only news holding down the price of course are the impending rate hikes from the Federal Reserve but if these political issues grow much worse you can bet that $1,300 will not be the top,” said Miguel Perez- Santalla, vicepresid­ent of Heraeus Metal Management in New York, referring to fears about Spain and North Korea.

Fed funds futures showed traders were pricing in a nearly 90% chance of a December rate hike.

Gold is highly sensitive to rising interest rates, which increase the opportunit­y cost of holding non-yielding bullion.

Higher rates also tend to boost the US currency, making dollarpric­ed gold costlier for non- US investors.

In other precious metals, silver rose 1.30% to $17.16 an ounce, after rising to the highest since Sept. 20 at $17.248.

“The gold-silver ratio is trading above the 10-year average, suggesting silver is undervalue­d,” Standard Chartered said in a note.

“Silver’s supply and demand dynamics are supportive of higher prices in light of stagnating mine output and firming industrial demand. India’s silver imports are up almost 60% for the year to August while China’s are up 45%.”

Platinum was up 2.30% at $932.60 an ounce, having hit its highest in two weeks at $933.90, while palladium rose 0.30% to $932.60. —

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