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Gold loses haven appeal as world gets used to bad news

YELLOW METAL’S PRICES HAVE TUMBLED ABOUT 13% FROM THIS YEAR’S HIGH IN SPOT MARKET

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Investors have grown immune to the economic and geopolitic­al risks that typically drive haven demand for gold. That’s how Richard Hayes, chief executive officer of Australia’s Perth Mint, the official bullion mint, summed up the reason behind bullion’s slump to a 19-month low despite tensions between the US and China and the collapse of the Turkish lira that roiled markets.

The World Gold Council said this month that demand for the metal in the first half of the year was the weakest in almost a decade.

Gold has tumbled about 13 per cent from this year’s high in the spot market as the dollar strengthen­ed and robust US economic growth bolstered the case for the Federal Reserve to keep raising borrowing costs.

Even during recent bouts of market turmoil, investors have bypassed gold in their hunt for havens, choosing instead the greenback, yen or Treasuries.

“The world, to some degree, has been quite used to bad news,” said Hayes, of the staterun enterprise that refines 15 per cent of the world’s gold.

“If you were to go back seven or eight years, any one of the trade wars, or what’s happening in the Middle East, or China, Brexit, the rise of the far left and far right, any one of those events would have been enough to make a fairly significan­t impact on volatility of prices of precious metals.”

Gold for immediate delivery rose 0.7 per cent to $1,182.66 an ounce at 3.36pm on Friday in New York. It’s still on track for the sixth straight weekly loss, the longest stretch since December 2016.

The metal touched $1,160.39 (Dh4,262.11) on Thursday, the lowest since January 2017. On the Comex in New York, bullion futures posted a 2.9 per cent decline for the week. A quick check of history shows the lack of demand for gold during turmoil this year isn’t unique.

“Gold has not tended to behave like a safe-haven asset in the past during times of stress when the dollar has appreciate­d at the same time,” Simona Gambarini, an economist at Capital Economics Ltd, said in a note to clients emailed to Bloomberg on Tuesday.

“During the Asian crisis, investors fleeing developing countries did not seek the safety of gold either — instead they sought refuge in US Treasuries and the dollar,” Gambarini wrote.

And amid the financial crisis, the price of gold “only started rallying towards the end of 2008,” she added.

Still, the argument for owning the precious metal remains strong as global debt climbs, according to Hayes.

US government debt has more than tripled since 2007, while tax cuts and new federal spending have fuelled a budget deficit that the Congressio­nal Budget Office predicts will reach $1 trillion in 2020.

With the Federal Reserve winding down debt holdings, US note and bond sales have risen to levels last seen in the aftermath of the recession that ended in 2009.

Bullion has lost out in a paradigm shift where the metal’s no longer viewed as the traditiona­l refuge when investors are in a risk-off mood, but that won’t last, according to Rick Rule, chief executive officer of Sprott US Holdings Inc.

“The fight really does seem to be between the dollar and gold, and gold seems to be losing,” Rule said. “I don’t think that continues, but I can’t tell you when that changes.”

 ?? Reuters ?? Gold bars at a gold and silver separation plant Vienna, Austria. Investors have of late bypassed gold in their hunt for havens, choosing instead the greenback, yen or Treasuries.
Reuters Gold bars at a gold and silver separation plant Vienna, Austria. Investors have of late bypassed gold in their hunt for havens, choosing instead the greenback, yen or Treasuries.

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