Oman Daily Observer

Bets on gold hold ground even as Fed rate hike looms

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While an imminent hike in US interest rates is putting a downdraft on gold prices, bullion’s allure as a safe haven is likely to limit the downside, traders and analysts say, owing to uncertaint­ies in the United States and Europe. Gold slumped to a 10-month low in mid-December after rates were increased for the first time in a year, but gold investors don’t appear to be as jittery ahead of the next Fed meeting and a nearcertai­n rate rise on March 14-15.

The previous slide came also as equity investors cheered the election of US President Donald Trump, but gold has since recovered about 7 per cent on a lack of clarity on Trump’s policies and worries about upcoming elections in Europe.

“The expectatio­ns of rate hikes are already priced into gold unless the expectatio­ns grow to four hikes, which we think is unwarrante­d,” said analyst Dominic Schnider of UBS Wealth Management in Hong Kong.

“With a more hawkish Fed, there is no incentive to chase gold. But, the disappoint­ment potential on President Donald Trump is very high. The Congress will not give what he wants.”

Higher interest rates make it less attractive to hold noninteres­t bearing gold, while a firmer US dollar also makes gold more expensive for buyers in other currencies.

Gold has fallen about 5 per cent from a three-month peak on February 24 to $1,198 an ounce, but traders say the risks of a sharp technical fall have eased and expect physical demand to emerge in a band from $1,150 to $1,200 an ounce.

“From the fund management industry, some people believe in this political uncertaint­y trend, and they are buyers of gold,” said Hans Brandt, commodity fund manager at Swisscanto Invest.

“Some believe economic growth is picking up, the dollar is getting stronger over the next 3-6 months. Those people are sellers at this level.”

Speculativ­e long positions held by hedge funds and money managers in COMEX gold have nearly tripled this year, suggesting a fresh round of allocation­s into gold in 2017.

However, the 121,720 lots at February 28 were still less than half of the 286,921 contracts held in July 2016, when speculativ­e fever was at its peak as gold prices hit over 2-year highs at $1,374.91 an ounce.

This lower amassed speculator position reduces the threat of a sharp drop in prices should a flood of speculativ­e positions be unwound, said Commerzban­k analyst Carsten Fritsch.

Increasing inflation across a number of major economies will also likely dampen appetite for fixed income investment­s and support gold, said UBS’s Schnider.

“There is interest in physical gold if prices drop below $1,200. People will definitely see value below $1,200 and that will help stabilise the market. So far, ETFs also have looked resilient,” Schnider said.

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