Business World

Gold holds losses after Fed minutes show case for interest rate hikes

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold fell on Wednesday, extending losses after the Federal Reserve released minutes of its December policy meeting, which fed the view among investors that more US interest rate hikes are in store.

In early trading, gold hit a three-and-a-half month high. But a firmer dollar encouraged selling, putting the precious metal on track for its first day of losses in nearly three weeks.

Though the Fed’s meeting minutes showed some disagreeme­nt between policy hawks and doves, “the tax cuts were seen as very beneficial for economy. A higher GDP ( gross domestic product) and higher consumer spending would boost the possibilit­y for more rate hikes, which would put pressure on gold,” said Bob Haberkorn, senior market strategist for RJO Futures in Chicago.

Gold, which as a non-yielding asset is highly sensitive to rising interest rates, fell in the run-up to the third US interest rate rise of 2017 in December. But then it climbed five percent from its midmonth low to the year’s close.

Spot gold was down 0.70% at $1,309.35 an ounce by 2:29 p.m. EST (1929 GMT), off its session high of $1,321.33. US gold futures for February delivery settled up $2.40, or 0.20%, at $1,318.50 per ounce.

Spot gold’s 14- day relative strength index ( RSI) touched 75 on Tuesday, it highest since September 2017. An RSI above 70 indicates a commodity is overbought and could herald a price correction, technical analysts said.

The dollar rebounded after upbeat US manufactur­ing and constructi­on data, snapping a three-week losing streak.

US equities rose, with the benchmark S&P 500 index surging past the 2,700-mark for the first time. Other major indexes hit record intraday highs on Wednesday.

Among other precious metals, palladium was down 0.70% at $1,084 an ounce after hitting a record high on Tuesday of $1,096.50.

Palladium soared 56% in 2017 on fears that strong demand from carmakers for catalytic converters, chiefly used in gasolinepo­wered vehicles, would tighten the market further after years of deficit.

“You have a market that is on the one hand in deficit, and on the other very well managed by some of the bigger producers, who are unwilling to ship additional units into the market,” Bank of America-Merrill Lynch analyst Michael Widmer said.

Spot silver was down 0.70% at $17.06 an ounce after touching a six-week high of $17.24. Platinum was 0.6% higher at $ 949, after touching $ 960.70, its highest since Sept. 19. —

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