Gold steady dollar dip higher physical demand
Gold steady dollar dip higher physical demand
LONDON: Gold steadied on Wednesday, largely holding on to gains from the previous session spurred by a retreat in the dollar and healthy physical demand.Gold had the potential to claw higher in the short term after the dollar pulled back from near nine-month highs and due to increasing appetite from speculators, one analyst said.”We’ve seen the dollar rally halted and that may give gold some additional room to manoeuvre to the upside so I’m quietly constructive for gold,” said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank in Copenhagen.”Outside markets are supportive – we’re seeing weakness in stock markets, oil is trading lower and the dollar is a tad weaker.”Spot gold was barely changed, down some 0.1 percent at $1,272.46 an ounce by 1033 GMT. In the previous session, it hit $1276.67, its highest since Oct. 5.U.S. gold futures also edged 0.1 percent lower to $1,273.The dollar index slipped after rising as high as 99.119 on Tuesday, its highest level since Feb. 1, largely fuelled by expectations of a U.S. rate hike in December. “Yellen may hike rates now, but the trajectory is going to be very modest, and so interest rates in the U.S. in real terms will actually go down into more negative territory,” said Dominic Schnider of UBS Wealth Management in Hong Kong.Also bolstering gold was a pick-up in demand ahead of Indian festivals this month such as Dhanteras and Diwali, a time when gold is traditionally given as a gift.”A recovery in physical demand provided the foundation for the rally that carried over into later trading,” HSBC analyst James Steel said in a note.Holdings of the SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, rose 0.34 percent to 956.83 tonnes on Tuesday from 953.56 tonnes on Monday.Hansen said there was more potential appetite from speculative funds after a sell-off in early October that has led to their positions falling to the lowest since March.MKS PAMP Group trader Jason Cerisola agreed, saying: “The extreme longs on Comex have been reduced significantly providing upside support for the yellow metal and potential for another assault on $1,300.”Silver was flat at $17.78 an ounce.Platinum climbed 0.45 percent to $967.50 an ounce, while palladium rose 0.63 percent to $637.00.