Business World

Gold edges down on rate hike views after robust US employment data

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GOLD prices inched down on Monday after robust US jobs data late last week potentiall­y increased the chances of more US interest rate hikes this year.

Spot gold had dipped 0.2% to $1,330.60 per ounce by 0257 GMT.

Spot gold on Friday declined 1.2%, its biggest one-day fall since Dec. 7. Last week, the metal saw its largest weekly decline since the week-ending Dec. 8.

US gold futures were down 0.30% at $1,333.30 per ounce.

Nonfarm payrolls rose by 200,000 jobs in January, the US Labor department said, beating expectatio­ns of 180,000 and their largest annual gain in more than 8-1/2 years. Average hourly earnings rose and boosted the year- on-year increase to 2.9%, the largest rise since June 2009.

“We have a bearish outlook for gold ... and yield-chasing behavior and a rosy economic outlook should pressure the yellow metal lower,” said OCBC analyst Barnabas Gan.

“The higher interest rate environmen­t will actually fuel further risk taking and is not good for gold.”

Futures markets reacted on Friday after the jobs data by pricing in the risk of three, or even more, rate rises from the US Federal Reserve this year.

The Fed last week held interest rates unchanged, but raised its inflation outlook and flagged “further gradual” rate increases.

Higher interest rates make gold less attractive to investors because it does not pay interest.

Asian share markets stumbled on Monday as fears of resurgent inflation battered bonds, toppled Wall Street from record highs and sparked speculatio­n central banks globally might be forced to tighten more aggressive­ly.

“The fall in stocks has just started and it could just be a shortterm correction before running higher. We should not read too much in to the fall in stocks and relate it to gold,” Mr. Gan said.

Meanwhile, hedge funds and money managers raised their net long position in COMEX gold contracts in the week to Jan. 30 to their highest level since late- September, US Commodity Futures Trading Commission ( CFTC) data showed on Friday.

Spot silver climbed 0.60% to $16.69. Silver fell 3.7% on Friday to its worst one-day decline since Dec. 15, 2016. It also saw its worst week since week-ending July 7, falling 4.6% last week. Platinum rose 0.20% to $ 987.95, after touching more than two week low at $982 on Friday. Palladium fell 0.50% to $1,041.50. —

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