The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Gold steadies

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LONDON. — Gold steadied above an earlier twoweek low yesterday as the dollar softened ahead of US consumer inflation data, which will be closely watched for clues about the likely pace of interest rate increases from the Federal Reserve.

The US currency was down 0,2 percent against a basket of currencies in early trade, having posted its biggest one-day rise in six weeks on Wednesday.

Spot gold was at $1,322.90 an ounce at 1118 GMT, little changed from $1,322.85 late on Wednesday but above an earlier low of $1,318.75, its weakest since September 1. US gold futures for December delivery were down 70 cents an ounce at $1,327.30.

With short positionin­g in the dollar near record levels, any signs that US inflation is picking up could support the case for another rate increase and send the US currency significan­tly higher, analysts said.

“We still expect the Fed to hike rates in December, which the market doesn’t. That is part of our bullish view on the dollar and in turn our more cautious view on gold,” Julius Baer analyst Carsten Menke said.

The Fed has a 2 percent inflation target, and a series of subdued inflation readings have dampened expectatio­ns for further rate rises in the near term. Although in the longer run a more inflationa­ry environmen­t could support gold demand, both a stronger dollar and higher rates would probably weigh on the metal in the near term.

“Any uptick in US inflation would be driven by a tightening labour market and a solid economic backdrop, and should be accompanie­d by rising interest rates by the Fed,” Menke said. “This shouldn’t have a positive impact on gold.” Spot prices hit their highest in more than a year last week at $1,357.54 an ounce on the back of a softer dollar and concerns over North Korea’s nuclear ambitions, which knocked stocks sharply lower. — Reuters.

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