Gold slips to five-week low as firmer dollar dents appeal

Bengaluru — Gold prices hit a more than five-week low on Monday as the dollar firmed with markets closely watching a US Federal Reserve meeting for clues on when the bank will start tapering its crisis-era stimulus measures.

Spot gold fell 0.3% to $1,748.69 per ounce by 5.12am. Prices had touched $1,741.86 earlier in the session, their lowest level since August 12.

US gold futures fell 0.1% to $1,749.00.

The dollar index hit a near one-month high, hurting gold’s appeal for holders of other currencies.

The market is starting to think that a taper announcement could be imminent and that there could be a hawkish surprise in the dot plots, said Stephen Innes, managing partner at SPI Asset Management.

Bullion is viewed as a hedge against the inflation and currency debasement likely from widespread stimulus. The Fed’s tapering could tackle both those conditions, diminishing gold’s appeal.

“It really looks like the markets turned quite bearish on gold, with some critical support levels ($1,780 and $1,750) giving away and I think this does open up for a test of $1,700,” Innes said.

The Fed is expected to open the door to reducing its monthly bond purchases when it meets on September 21-22, while tying any actual change to US job growth in September and beyond.

The central bank is also likely to release fresh economic projections and a new read on officials’ interest rate expectations.

Higher interest rates raise the opportunity cost of holding non-interest bearing gold.

Elsewhere, silver fell 1.2% to $22.13 per ounce, after earlier hitting its lowest level since November 2020 at $22.01.

Platinum slumped to a ten-month trough of $907.50 and was last down 2.8% at $914.54.

Palladium slipped 3.5% to $1,945.17.

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za