Business World

Gold steadies near five-month peak as US rate hike expectatio­ns ease

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GOLD held steady near a fivemonth peak on Tuesday as expectatio­ns for fewer interest rate hikes by the US Federal Reserve next year supported the nonyieldin­g precious metal.

Palladium briefly traded above gold earlier in the session, with prices of the autocataly­st metal rising more than two percent after US President Donald Trump tweeted that China had agreed to cut import tariffs on Americanma­de cars.

Palladium prices last week briefly surpassed gold for the first time since 2002.

Spot gold was little changed at $1,243.34 per ounce as of 1:53 p.m. EST (1853 GMT). It touched its highest level since July 11 at $1,250.55 in the prior session.

US gold futures settled down $2.20 or 0.18% at $1,247.20 per ounce.

“We are in a situation where the US Federal Reserve is starting to signal they may be very close to neutrality, which means just a few more interest rate hikes,” said Bart Melek, head of commodity strategies at TD Securities.

“Over the last few weeks, several speakers from the Fed, including Chairman Jerome Powell, have let the market know that they will be looking at the data when deciding the monetary policy going forward… The market is interpreti­ng this as lower interest rates in 2019 and 2020.”

Lower interest rates reduce the opportunit­y cost of holding bullion and weigh on the dollar.

Gold investors are awaiting the Fed meeting on Dec. 18-19, where the central bank “could have more dovish language and cautious approach to future hikes,” said George Gero, managing director at RBC Wealth Management.

Speculator­s trimmed their net short positions in Comex gold contracts in the week to Dec. 4, data showed on Monday.

“There remains significan­t scope for the market to further increase long positions and to further reduce short positions,” Societe Generale said in a note.

“A weaker dollar, driven by moderating Fed policy, could provide the market with the necessary impetus.”

Among other precious metals, palladium climbed two percent to $1,241.40 an ounce.

“There was some mention of tariff removal by the US President on the autos, that certainly means better demand for vehicles that use palladium and there is a general concern that the palladium market is in a structural deficit,” Melek of TD Securities said.

Spot silver fell 0.3% to $14.49 per ounce, having touched $14.72 an ounce earlier, its highest level since Nov. 7. Platinum was 0.7% lower at $779.74 per ounce. Prices had slipped to their lowest since Sept. 10 at $773.50 in the previous session. —

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