Gold jumped more than 1 percent on Tuesday as investors sought assets seen as havens from risk amid mounting political and security concerns over North Korea, the Middle East and the looming French election.
Spot gold was up 0.9 percent to $1,265.47 per ounce at 1412 GMT. US gold futures rose 0.4 percent to $1,259.20.
“Tensions in the Middle East have not receded and various other geopolitical stories can be put together which help support the price of gold,” said Natixis precious metals analyst Bernard Dahdah, adding French elections were also a risk factor.
Investors also bought the Japanese yen and US Treasuries, while the dollar index fell and stocks took a knock. Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve plans to raise US interest rates gradually so as to sustain healthy growth without letting the economy overheat, Fed Chair Janet Yellen said on Monday.
Rising interest rates lift the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion. From a technical viewpoint, a rally above $1,260 could be hard to sustain “as gold lacks momentum,” Jeffrey Halley, a senior market analyst at OANDA said.
“A break of $1,240 will prelude a deeper correction,” he said. Commerzbank commodity analyst Carsten Fritsch said Tuesday’s drop below $1,250 prompted buying interest, establishing it as solid support.
Gold has been failing to break key chart resistance at its 200-day moving average. Holdings of SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, rose 0.21 percent to 838.26 tons on Monday from 836.49 tons on Friday.
“There is certainly more geopolitical risks at the moment and that is more positive (for) gold than platinum and there is no surprise in that sense to see the spread widen ... There is generally a downbeat (sentiment) about diesel cars in Europe,” a London-based market analyst with a mining company said.
Source: Arab News
GMT 16:15 2017 Tuesday ,03 October
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