Business World

Gold maintains gains after Fed says it will leave rates unchanged

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold advanced on Wednesday as traders reposition­ed themselves after the Federal Reserve said it will keep target interest rates unchanged for the time being.

Prices held onto earlier gains after statements from the US central bank indicating that while it would leave rates unchanged, it was on track to lift borrowing costs again in December.

The Fed will leave rates unchanged at one to 1.25%. Gold is highly sensitive to rising US interest rates, as these lift the opportunit­y cost of holding nonyieldin­g bullion, while boosting the dollar, in which it is priced.

Spot gold was 0.40% higher at $1,276.37 an ounce by 3:26 p.m. EDT (1926 GMT), having earlier peaked at $1,280.87. Its upward move accelerate­d after it broke through its 100-day moving average at $1,275 an ounce, a key chart level.

US gold futures for December delivery settled up $6.80, or 0.50%, at $1,277.30 per ounce.

“The price action in gold was most likely positionin­g reversals. We saw some shorts cover and then the market came back,” said Daniel Ghali, commoditie­s strategist for TD Securities in Toronto.

The latest Fed statement came a day ahead of confirmati­on of a new chair, likely replacing incumbent Janet Yellen. Fed Governor Jerome Powell is widely seen as the favorite to take over next year. He is considered less hawkish and therefore more bullish for gold than his main challenger.

“Coming closer to the end of the year and two FOMC meetings in a month and half, which could determine the direction of monetary policy, is what has been keeping gold rangebound,” Capital Economics analyst Simona Gambarini said of the Federal Open Market Committee.

Wall Street held onto modest gains on Wednesday, while the dollar recovered against a basket of major currencies. Oil prices retreated. Traders also awaited US President Donald Trump’s tax plan, which Republican­s planned to release on Thursday morning.

Elsewhere, silver rose 2.70% to $17.148, after reaching $17.195, the strongest since Oct. 20, while platinum climbed 2.06% to $934.10 an ounce after touching $937.30, the highest since Oct. 16.

Palladium surged 2.20% at $1,001.75 an ounce, the strongest since Oct. 16. It rose nearly five percent in October. —

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