Business World

Bullion drops by more than 1% to six-week low on stronger greenback

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold fell to a six-week low on Friday as the dollar strengthen­ed on US economic data and investor sentiment was undermined by longerterm expectatio­ns for a US rate rise.

Technical factors were also at play, with downward momentum gathering pace as prices broke through their April low at $1,175 an ounce.

Major markets in Europe, China and Singapore were closed for the May Day holiday last Friday, with London to close on Monday.

Spot gold was down 0.8% at $ 1,174.11 an ounce at 2: 40 p. m. EDT ( 1840 GMT), after falling 1.2% to its lowest since March 20 at $ 1,170.20. It was on track to close the week down 0.4%, its fourth straight week of losses.

US gold futures for June delivery settled down 0.7% at $1,174.50 an ounce.

Gold hit its highest since early April at $1,215 earlier this week but failed to hold that level after the Federal Reserve signaled on Wednesday that it saw the recent slowdown in the US economy as transitory and was not ruling out an interest rate rise this year. “There is still fallout from the FOMC (Federal Open Market Committee) — there has been a hiccup in the US recovery, but certainly the view is that interest rates are going up, so gold is struggling,” said Simon Weeks, head of precious metals at the Bank of Nova Scotia. “On a thin bank holiday weekend, that will be exacerbate­d.”

The metal is highly sensitive to expectatio­ns for rate increases, which would lift the opportunit­y cost of holding non-yielding bullion while boosting the dollar.

The dollar was up 0.7%. A stronger greenback makes gold more expensive for holders of other currencies.

From a chart perspectiv­e, a weekly close for gold below the $1,180 support level could be the catalyst for a further pullback, analysts said.

“What’s really driving gold today is technical trading as opposed to any fundamenta­l reasoning,” said Mike Dragosits, senior commodity strategist for TD Securities in Toronto.

Among other precious metals, silver was down 0.4% at $16.06 an ounce, while platinum fell 1.1% to $1,123.50 an ounce and palladium edged 0.5% lower to $770.72 an ounce. —

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