Business World

Gold hits five-and-a-half-month low on strong dollar and Treasury yields

-

NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold fell for the third straight session on Monday, reaching a five-anda-half-month low as the dollar and Treasury yields strengthen­ed on expectatio­ns that Presidente­lect Donald J. Trump will boost US spending.

The market pared losses as the greenback and yields came off their sharp highs.

“Uncertaint­y about the US economic outlook and also about internatio­nal risk events such as the Austrian presidenti­al election and the Italian constituti­onal referendum next month could have an impact on wider markets and impact gold’s trading in the medium term,” said ActivTrade­s Chief Analyst Carlo Alberto de Casa.

Spot gold hit its lowest since June 3 at $1,211.08 an ounce and was down 0.6% at $ 1,218.92 an ounce by 2: 32 p. m. EST ( 1932 GMT). It was on track for its biggest three- day drop since July 2015.

US gold futures settled down 0.2% at $1,221.70.

The dollar rose for the sixth straight session, reaching an 11- month high against a basket of major currencies, while US 10-year Treasury yields soared to their highest since December 2015 at 2.3%.

“Our FX strategist­s believe the US dollar is set to break new highs after consolidat­ing through much of 2016, driven by the president- elect favoring infrastruc­ture spending and tax cuts, as well as the increased likelihood of higher rates in 201718,” said Standard Chartered in a note.

“A stronger US dollar and higher rates do not only present a hurdle ( for gold) in the short term, but are also likely to weigh on prices in the forthcomin­g months.”

The market is now betting on the Federal Reserve raising interest rates more quickly. Higher US interest rates could lift the opportunit­y cost of holding noninteres­t-bearing gold, pressuring the price of bullion.

Saying the coming year under a new US president will be one of “changes” for economic policy, Dallas Federal Reserve Bank President Robert Kaplan on Monday called for “intelligen­t” fiscal policy to boost growth over the long term.

SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold- backed exchangetr­aded fund, said its holdings fell on Friday.

Among precious metals, palladium has been the outlier, having risen 7.7% last week. On Monday, it was up 3.1% at $692.90 an ounce.

Silver fell 3.3% to its lowest since June at $ 16.61 an ounce, tracking gold’s downside.

Platinum was down 1.2% at $928.50, after falling to $917.50, the lowest since late-February. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines