
Gold fell on Tuesday as the dollar’s buoyant start to the New Year kept the pressure on prices after the metal posted its biggest quarterly loss in more than three years.
The themes of late 2016 appeared to be persisting in the wider markets in the New Year, with equities bouncing while the dollar posted its biggest rise in three weeks. Spot gold was down 0.4 percent at $1,147.51 an ounce by 1235 GMT.
US gold futures for February delivery were down $3.70 an ounce at $1,148.00. Gold fell sharply in the wake of Donald Trump’s victory in November’s US presidential election, sliding by more than 12 percent in the fourth quarter.
Trump’s victory boosted the dollar and sparked a sharp rally in bond yields, lifting the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold and blunting investors’ appetite for the metal. “The market has carried the theme of higher dollar, yield and stocks into 2017 — a formidable challenge to gold,” said Saxo Bank’s head of research, Ole Hansen. There are some potential positives for gold, he added.
“We have plenty of event risks is month, with Donald Trump (taking office) on Jan. 20 being the biggest,” Hansen said.
“With exposure cut dramatically, we may see the selling pressure from long liquidation fade as most of the those adjustments would have been carried out before year-end.”
Hedge funds and money managers reduced net long positions in COMEX gold to the lowest level in nearly 11 months and trimmed bullish bets in silver contracts in the week to Dec. 27, 2016. Indications from the US Federal Reserve that it would press ahead with further interest rate rises this year are buoying the dollar and pressuring gold.
“Further to the Fed’s interest rate hike in December, along with a bullish view of the US economy and the prospects for three more interest rate hikes in 2017, gold will remain weak,” Sun Global Investments said in a note on Tuesday.
A strong start to 2016 meant that gold still managed to end last year with its first annual gain since 2012, rising 8.5 percent. Silver was flat on Tuesday at $15.93 at ounce. Platinum group metals shrugged off the weakness in gold, however, with platinum rising 1.8 percent to $915.50 and palladium up 1.9 percent at $691.50. Palladium was the best-performing precious metal last year, with the price rising 20 percent for its biggest annual gain in six years. Platinum lagged gains in the wider complex, however, ending 2016 only 1 percent higher.
Source: Arab News
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