Business World

Trade war talk pushes gold prices higher as the greenback weakens

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold prices rose on Friday as the threat of a global trade war pushed equities and the US dollar lower and spurred demand for assets such as bullion that are broadly seen as safe-haven investment­s.

US President Donald Trump’s decision on Thursday to place tariffs on imports of aluminum and steel raised fears of retaliatio­n by other countries and knocked the dollar from a six-week high, making dollar-denominate­d gold cheaper for users of other currencies.

“Trade in gold today is stepping back and looking at tariffs as a potentiall­y more dovish scenario: weaker economic growth, lower real yields and a weaker dollar are impacting trade,” said Rob Haworth, senior investment strategist for US Bank Wealth Management.

Spot gold rose 0.50% at $1,322.54 per ounce by 1:43 p.m. EST (1843 GMT).

US gold futures for April delivery settled up $18.20, or 1.4%, at $1,323.40 per ounce.

Gold, however, was still down 0.50% on the week, putting the yellow metal on track for a second consecutiv­e weekly loss.

Bullion touched $ 1,302.61 per ounce on Thursday, the lowest level since Jan. 2, pressured by expectatio­ns that the US Federal Reserve will raise interest rates more aggressive­ly than previously thought.

Higher interest rates are goldnegati­ve since they raise bond yields and tend to boost the dollar, reducing the attractive­ness of non-yielding bullion.

But the threat of a global trade war overpowere­d any fears of rate hikes, said Saxo Bank analyst Ole Hansen.

“If a trade war becomes a reality, it could push inflation up and growth down and that should ease the aggressive­ness of the Fed. That’s why it has become the focus” of the gold market, he said.

Also positive for gold was its ability to hold above its technicall­y important 100-day moving average price at $1,300, also a key psychologi­cal level for investors.

Near- term technical resistance was at the 50-day moving average at $1,324.60, analysts at ScotiaMoca­tta said.

Supporting bullion prices was an increase in holdings of gold in exchange- traded funds tracked by Reuters of nearly 17 tons, or 1%, since mid-February.

Meanwhile, silver gained 0.20% at $ 16.49 an ounce, off a twomonth low hit Thursday. It was barely changed from last week.

Platinum dropped 0.20% to $963.90 an ounce, near two-month lows and down 3.2% this week.

Palladium increased 0.50% to trade at $ 993.80 an ounce, but was down 5% this week after suffering its biggest fall in over a year on Thursday. —

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