Business World

Gold gains on lackluster US economic numbers, Brexit deal doubts

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GOLD hit nearly a two-week high on Wednesday as tepid US economic data reinforced views the Federal Reserve would be patient on monetary policy, with bullion’s appeal also bolstered by uncertaint­y over a Brexit deal ahead of a key vote.

Spot gold gained 0.5% to $1,308.83 per ounce as of 2:05 p.m. EDT (1805 GMT), its highest level since March 1.

US gold futures settled 0.9% higher at $1,309.3 per ounce.

“The US PPI numbers came weaker than expected. This, coupled with the Brexit news, is helping gold,” said Bob Haberkorn, senior market strategist at RJO Futures

Domestic producer prices in the US rose 1.9% on a year-overyear basis in February, the smallest annual increase since June 2017.

Tepid inflation and disappoint­ing producer price data this week support the Fed’s stance of keeping interest rates on hold, denting the dollar and lifting demand for non-interestyi­elding gold. The US central bank’s rate-setting committee will issue its next policy statement following its March 19-20 meeting.

“Traders are buying into the fact that they are expecting a very dovish US Fed announceme­nt,” Mr. Haberkorn said.

Gold breached the psychologi­cally significan­t $1,300 level on Tuesday, helped by a weaker dollar, with demand for the US currency taking a hit after softer-than-expected US February inflation data and falling government bond yields.

“Metals technicall­y have more upside to go just on rising geopolitic­al uncertaint­y, specifical­ly what’s going on in Britain,” Mr. Haberkorn added.

Prime Minister Theresa May lost a second attempt for her Brexit plan, plunging Britain deeper into a political crisis before the country’s planned March 29 departure from the European Union (EU), and denting risk appetite.

However, European shares regained some ground on Wednesday, buoyed by optimism that British lawmakers were set to rule out a no-deal Brexit. Britain’s parliament is due to vote at 1900 GMT on whether the country should leave the EU on March 29 without a deal.

On the technical front, “gold is now heading towards the next potential resistance around $1313, a former support level,” said Forex. com analyst Fawad Razaqzada.

However, if the $1,300 support level gives away again, “we could see a more significan­t sell-off this time around.”

Concerns over slowing global economic growth were also bolstering appeal for gold, considered a safe store of value during economic or political uncertaint­ies, analysts said.

Reflecting sentiment, holdings in the world’s largest goldbacked exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust, rose about 0.4% on Tuesday, a second straight day of gains.

Among other precious metals, palladium climbed 0.9% to $1,555.01 per ounce, while platinum rose 0.1% to $838.

Silver was up 0.1% to $15.46 per ounce. —

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