Khaleej Times

Stronger dollar crashes gold, uncertaint­y lifts it

- Pratima Desai — Reuters

london — Gold fell on Tuesday as reinforced expectatio­ns of an increase to US interest rates next month pushed the dollar higher, though political and economic uncertaint­y in Europe and the United States are likely to offer continued price support.

Spot gold was down 0.7 per cent at $1,229.60 an ounce by 1016 GMT but has still gained more than six per cent since the start of the year. The dollar strengthen­ed after Federal Reserve members pointed to the potential for higher US rates next month, making commoditie­s priced in the currency more expensive for non-US buyers.

“Gold is capped by the likelihood that US monetary policy will be tighter at some stage, potentiall­y in March,” said Societe Generale analyst Robin Bhar.

“There is a lot of political uncertaint­y, there are safe-haven flows going into gold.”

Bhar added that gold is also an investment hedge against correction­s in what look to be overvalued equities. Investor demand for gold can be seen in the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust

, holdings of which have risen by more than five per cent to 27.044 million ounces since Jan. 31.

Major US indices — the Dow Jones Industrial Average

and the S&P 500 — have hit consecutiv­e record highs in recent days.“Gold’s resilience is all the more impressive considerin­g US equities are setting record after record, while the dollar is also fairly strong,” said INTL FCStone analyst Edward Meir.

Meir added that support comes from a “myriad political and economic uncertaint­ies” that lie ahead in 2017.

Traders’ attention on Tuesday will focus on speeches by a number of Federal Reserve presidents, looking for clues on the timing of US rate rises.

Also on the radar is US President Donald Trump’s address to Congress on February 28, which analysts and traders hope will offer detail on infrastruc­ture spending and tax cuts.

Technical support is around the 21-day moving average near $1,221 an ounce, while $1,250 presents a major barrier, analysts say. A break higher will meet Fibonacci resistance at $1,255.

Elsewhere, silver fell 0.8 per cent to $17.86 an ounce, platinum lost 1.2 per cent to $988.25 and palladium ceded one per cent to $764.40.

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