Spot gold was mostly unchanged at $1,195.79 an ounce at 0654 GMT. U.S. gold futures rose 0.1 percent to $1,201.60.
• Strong U.S. payrolls data last week cemented expectations that the U.S. Federal Reserve will raise interest rates in September, in what would be its third hike this year, with expectations of one rise more in December.
Higher rates increase bond yields, making the non-yielding bullion less attractive and tend to boost the dollar.
• “The precious metal has shown excruciating weakness as the U.S. economy demonstrated a stellar performance in Q2 2018,” said Benjamin Lu, commodities analyst at Phillip Futures.
• Traders were bracing for a potential escalation in the Sino-U.S. row after President Donald Trump raised the stakes on Friday by saying he was ready to impose tariffs on virtually all Chinese imports to the United States.
The rhetoric has made investors buy the dollar in the belief that the United States has less to lose from a trade war - making dollar-priced gold more expensive for non-U.S. buyers.
• “The imposition of increased tariffs (between the United States and China) will indefinitely damage global economic conditions in the longer term ... However, safe-haven demand remains weak for the shorter term as markets fixate on stronger dollar prospects,” Lu said.
• Gold prices dropped more than 12 percent from a peak in April with the metal losing its safe-haven status to the U.S. dollar, driving investors to raise their bearish bets on Comex gold and liquidate gold exchange traded funds.
• “With the greenback supported by expectations of higher U.S. interest rates, this may translate to nothing but further pain for gold,” said Lukman Otunuga, research analyst at FXTM, adding that spot prices could drop to $1,185-$1,160 levels in the short- to medium-term.
• Meanwhile, physical gold buying waned slightly in Asia this week as investors waited to see if prices would fall further, traders said.
The yellow metal is finding strong resistance at $1,200, with investors selling into any rallies that threaten to push it above that level, ANZ analysts said in a research note.
• Among other precious metals, spot silver rose 0.3 percent to $14.19 an ounce, platinum climbed 1 percent to $790.20 an ounce.
Palladium gained 0.6 percent to $981.10 an ounce, after hitting its highest in nearly 12 weeks at $991.15.
• Gold Technical Analysis: Bull flag hanging above $1,190.00 a troy ounce still looking at 1,226.00 target
Gold bear trend has been losing some bearish steam in the last two weeks as the market found a bottom at $1,172.82 a troy ounce.
Bulls are attempting to create a bull flag above 1,182.90 August 24 low. The bull confirmation would come on a break above 1,204.10 (August 3 swing low) along with the 50, 100 and 200-period simple moving averages. The bull targets are seen at 1,220.90 (July 18 low) and 1,225.90 (July 17 low)
Alternatively, a bear breakout below 1,182.90 (August 24 low) would invalidate the bullish scenario and open the gates to a potential retest of the 2018 low.
• GOLD PRICE CHART HOLDS ABOVE AUGUST LOW
On August 30, we forecasted a shiny future for gold. Gold’s price chart has advanced in an impulsive wave and is now correcting sideways. This sideways correction likely holds above the August15 low of 1160. We are unsure of the corrective wave that is unfolding, but so long as gold prices remain above 1160, the pattern is bullish.