BusinessMirror

Gold gains as Fed’s Powell stops short of giving taper timeline

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GOLD rose the most in two weeks after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell said tapering may be appropriat­e this year, easing concern that policy makers will soon tighten monetary policy.

The central bank could begin reducing its monthly bond purchases this year, though it won’t be in a hurry to begin raising interest rates thereafter, Powell said Friday in a virtual speech at the Kansas City Fed’s annual Jackson Hole symposium. The dollar and real Treasury yields sank as the Fed Chair spoke, allowing gold to gain past two of its main moving averages.

“Powell’s speech is slightly dovish but not dovish enough to jump start any large-scale buying in precious metals,” said Nicky Shiels, head of metals strategy at MKS (Switzerlan­d) SA. “It was his strongest signal yet that the taper will begin this year (not next) and he didn’t fully capitalize on the risk of the delta variant on policy.”

Powell’s much-anticipate­d speech eased prior concerns that the central bank will soon tighten monetary policy to combat inflation. A rapid increase in United States prices linked to snarled supply chains and shortages had raised the prospect of an early reduction in stimulus, which has cast a shadow over the gold market this month. The Fed Chair used his speech to reiterate his view that those pressures are temporary and confined to a narrow group of goods.

The metal has stumbled much of this year as vaccine rollouts, stronger-than-expected recoveries in some economies and worries over rising interest rates dimmed its appeal. Low rates helped power non-interest-bearing bullion to a record high last year on a wave of investor cash. In 2021, exchangetr­aded funds holding the metal have experience­d outflows.

Spot gold rose 1.5 percent to $1,818.37 an ounce at 3:28 p.m. in New York, its highest since Aug. 4. The metal is down 4.3 percent this year. Bullion futures for December delivery rose 1.4 percent to settle at $1,819.50 on the Comex, its biggest jump in two weeks. Silver, platinum and palladium all gained. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index weakened 0.5 percent.

Attention will now turn to data on the strength of the US labor market, which with inflation at target will likely determine the timing of tapering. The next non-farm payrolls report is due in a week, with a repeat of the substantia­l out-performanc­e seen in August almost certain to hurt gold.

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