· Gold steadied on Thursday as positive U.S. economic data and prospects of tighter monetary policy offset limited gains from safe haven buying.
· Spot gold was up 0.1 percent at $1,197.87 an ounce by 2:14 p.m. EDT (1814 GMT). U.S. gold futures settled down $1.30, or 0.11 percent, at $1,201.60.
· Earlier in the session, prices broke above the key $1,200 level as a slide in stock markets on the back of rising U.S. Treasury yields prompted some investors to seek refuge in the precious metal.
· “The U.S. economy is still in a very good place. The expectations of a rate hike next year is tilting toward four from three,” said Nicholas Cawley, an analyst at DailyFX.com.
“The higher the rates, the more attractive for investors looking for safe haven to move into U.S. Treasuries than gold.”
· About half of the Fed’s policymakers, including Chairman Jerome Powell, used public appearances on Wednesday to show an increasingly unified view that the U.S. economy was not headed for any obvious potholes.
· The U.S. dollar held near recent highs against the euro and yen, as investors evaluated the impact of a global government bond rout that has lifted benchmark U.S. Treasury yields to seven-year peaks.
· Kitco Metals senior analyst Jim Wyckoff said some investors had turned to gold as a hedge against inflation risk.
· Gold has fallen about 12 percent since hitting a peak in April, under pressure from a strong dollar, which has been boosted by a vibrant U.S. economy, rising interest rates and fears of a global trade war.
· The retreat in the stock markets have made investors a little cautious about overall economic growth in the United States, said Jeffrey Christian, managing partner of CPM Group.
“There is a little bit of shift (of money to gold).”
“Expectations are that it (non-farm payrolls figure) is going to be a bumper. It should underpin the dollar strength. I can’t see any fundamental reason to buy gold above other haven assets,” Cawley said.
· Investors are awaiting U.S. non-farm payrolls numbers due on Friday, with a Reuters survey showing economists on average expect a rise of 185,000 in September after a jump of 201,000 in August.
· Holdings in SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, dropped 0.8 percent on Wednesday, having declined more than 4.5 million ounces since late April.
· Meanwhile, spot silver slipped 0.1 percent to $14.56. Palladium was 0.1 percent lower at $1,054.22, while platinum was up 0.2 percent at $823.30.
Reference: Reuters