Business World

Gold off highs as investors dig in for Trump speech, Fed meeting

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold slipped back to a one-week low on Tuesday as markets braced for US President Donald Trump’s annual State of the Union address and news on US monetary policy.

The speech and policy news will come amid positive consumer data and continuing fallout from a Republican memo alleging anti-Trump bias.

“A lot of this is reposition­ing for the State of the Union coming on tonight,” said Josh Graves, senior commoditie­s strategist at RJO Futures.

“And the talk of this memo that has damaging informatio­n in it has the market a little spooked.”

Spot gold was down 0.22% at $1,336.99 an ounce by 1:49 p.m. EST (1849 GMT), earlier touching a one-week low of $1,334.10.

US gold futures for February delivery settled down $ 4.90, or 0.40%, at $1,335.40 per ounce.

Markets are also bracing for potentiall­y hawkish language from the US Federal Reserve, which ends its two-day policy meeting on Wednesday amid signs that US economic growth is picking up steam.

“On Friday US jobs data should confirm the strong picture for the US economy, which speaks in favor of rate rises and a strong dollar, so in the short term gold is under pressure,” said Mitsubishi analyst Jonathan Butler.

He added, however, that the dollar is still “very much in a longterm downtrend.”

US Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin gave dollar bears a boost last week with a tacit endorsemen­t of a weak US currency, though Mr. Trump later tried to row back from those comments.

Gold hovered near its oneweek low despite world equity markets taking their biggest twoday dive in six months, while the dollar index slipped back after climbing overnight.

Rising bond yields and a selloff in health care shares sent the US stock market sliding, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average’s 352- point tumble its steepest in eight months. Higher bond yields make gold a less attractive investment because it pays no interest.

In other precious metals, silver dropped 0.30% at $ 17.11 an ounce after touching a six- day low.

Palladium was down 3.10% at $1,052.20 an ounce after hitting a five-week low at $1,047.00.

Platinum was down 0.90% at $995 an ounce after touching $987.49, a one-week low.

A surge in platinum prices this month has helped the metal used in autocataly­sts to break above a downward trendline in place since early 2013. —

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