Business World

Gold dips as lull in Italy’s crisis dampens safe-haven buying interest

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BENGALURU — Gold eased on Wednesday after the Italian government indicated it was open to trimming its budget deficit and debt, soothing investors’ nerves and prompting a wider move back into stocks and other higher-risk assets.

Bullion was also pressured by a stronger dollar as economic data supported the view that the US economy is strong.

Spot gold was down 0.3% at $1,199.56 per ounce by 1:47 p.m. EDT (1747 GMT), after it touched an over one-week high of $1,208.32 earlier in the session.

US gold futures for December delivery settled down $4.10 or 0.34% at $1,202.90 per ounce.

Global stock markets rose, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average opening at a record high, and Italian bonds rallied after Rome pledged it would narrow budget deficits in the coming years.

“With US equities hitting record highs here, the stickiness in equity prices will continue and the dollar strength will continue to materializ­e with what the US Federal Reserve is doing,” said David Song, a currency analyst at DailyFX.

“Markets will continue to shun gold as we don’t have any incentive really to park money as we are seeing interest rates going up.”

A stronger greenback makes dollar-denominate­d gold more expensive for holders of other currencies, while rising interest rates increase the opportunit­y cost of holding non-yielding bullion.

Gold prices have fallen for six months, shedding some 11%, largely due to the dollar’s strength. The greenback has benefited from a vibrant economy, rising US interest rates and fears of a global trade war.

“What the market is looking for is confirmati­on for underlying strength of the US economy,” said Suki Cooper, precious metals analyst at Standard Chartered Bank, adding investors will now await US nonfarm payrolls data due to be released on Friday.

According to a Reuters survey of economists, nonfarm payrolls likely increased by 185,000 in September after jumping 201,000 in August.

On the technical front, the gold market is “consolidat­ing sideways,” Commerzban­k analysts said in a weekly note.

“It is not clear whether this is going to be a continuati­on phase or is in fact a possible base developing. It has started to erode the 55-day moving average and attention is on the four-month downtrend at $1,213.57.”

Holdings of the largest goldbacked exchange-traded fund, New York’s SPDR Gold Trust, fell on Tuesday to the lowest since February 2016 at 23.72 million ounces.

Among other precious metals, silver was up 0.2% at $14.67 per ounce; platinum rose 0.5% to $830.70 per ounce; while palladium gained 0.8% to $1,059.72. —

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