Business World

Gold at 2-week high on Sino-US trade deal hopes; palladium peaks

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GOLD prices rose to their strongest level in more than two weeks on Monday as the dollar weakened on hopes the United States and China are nearing a trade deal, while palladium hit a record high.

Spot gold had gained 0.1% to $1,322.72 per ounce as of 0614 GMT, just below a 9-month peak of $1,326.30 an ounce marked on Jan. 31.

US gold futures rose 0.3% to $1,326.1 an ounce.

“Alleviatio­n of risks around the trade talks has certainly benefited the markets,” said ANZ analyst Daniel Hynes, adding that signs of progress in the discussion­s had reduced appetite for the dollar, which has been supporting gold.

The dollar was marginally weaker on Monday, as increasing expectatio­ns of a US-Sino trade deal led investors to shift away from the safety of the greenback, which had been the preferred safe-haven during the trade dispute.

The United States and China will resume trade talks this week in Washington with time running short to ease their bruising trade war, but US President Donald Trump repeated on Friday that he may extend a March 1 deadline for a deal and keep tariffs on Chinese goods from rising.

Spot gold prices have risen about 3.3% so far this year on hopes that the world’s two largest economies will hammer out a truce and on expectatio­ns the US Federal Reserve will pause its cycle of interest rate hikes.

Minutes of the Fed’s January policy meeting are due on Wednesday and should provide more guidance on the likelihood or not for rate hikes this year.

“Looser monetary policies are generally favorable to gold, which has benefited since the Fed paused its tightening path,” said Nicholas Frappell, global general manager, ABC Bullion. “The market will be looking closely at US and China data and I think gold will target a retest of the $1,326 level again.”

However, Holdings of SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, fell to its lowest level this year at 793.03 tons on Friday.

Meanwhile, palladium hit a record high of $1,449 an ounce and stayed in a broad $20 range in early trade.

“In combinatio­n with supplyside issues, the market is going to be in a sizeable deficit this year… potential for better-thanexpect­ed demand from China will exacerbate that tightness,” ANZ’s Hynes added.

Among other precious metals, platinum slipped by 0.1% to $801, after having touched a near two-week high of $807 an ounce earlier in the session.

Silver was up 0.3% to $15.82 per ounce. —

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