Firm dollar saps gold’s strength

Bengaluru — Gold prices dipped on Wednesday, after posting gains in the previous three sessions, as the dollar gained ground ahead of an interest rate decision by the US Federal Reserve later in the day.

Spot gold was down about 0.1% at $1,304.85 per ounce, as of 4.28am GMT, trading in a narrow $3 range. US gold futures dipped about 0.2% to $1,304.60 an ounce.

“The firm dollar and gains in equities are headwinds for gold today and currently the risk appetite is slightly high,” said Benjamin Lu, analyst with Singapore-based Phillip Futures.

Asian shares were trading near six-month highs ahead of a policy decision by the US Federal Reserve.

The Fed is due to make its rate announcement at 6pm GMT, followed by a news conference by Fed chair Jerome Powell.

“The market is largely waiting for the Fed’s decision and expectations are towards zero rate hikes this year,” Lu said, adding that worries surrounding the China-US trade row might increase pressure on the metal.

Traders are even building in bets for a rate cut in 2020.

The dollar rose against most of its peers on reports of renewed tension in US-China trade negotiations. Since 2018, investors have favoured the dollar as a safe haven against the trade dispute.

A stronger dollar makes gold expensive for holders of other currencies.

Meanwhile, palladium rose 0.3% to $1,601.47/oz, after surging past the $1,600 level for the first time to register a record high at $1,606 in the previous session.

The auto-catalyst metal’s price has nearly doubled since mid-August and is up about 27% so far this year on sustained supply tightness in the market.

Analysts say the risk of a ban on the export of precious-metals scrap and tailings from Russia, palladium’s major producer, added to concerns in an already tight market and pushed prices to record levels.

Among other precious metals, spot platinum rose 1.2% to $855.93/oz. Earlier in the session, it touched its highest since March 4 at $858.17.

Silver dipped 0.1% to $15.33/oz.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za