• “Gold is closely tracking both the U.S. dollar and equities, more so the dollar,” said Peter Fung, head of dealing at Wing Fung Precious Metals in Hong Kong.
“Gold has traded largely in a $2 range today, with the dollar being stronger. Prices should hold here until they find some new trigger, when they can try again for an upside,” he added.
• “Geopolitical and macroeconomic factors are still not indicating exuberance and risk appetite returning to markets with full throttle,” said Religare Securities analyst Sugandha Sachdeva.
• Trade war concerns, recent tensions between the United States and Saudi Arabia, and a hawkish Fed are among factors likely to weigh on appetite for riskier assets. This bodes well for gold as a hedge against market volatility and a portfolio diversifier, she added.
• A bearish target zone of $1,208-$1,217 per ounce remains unchanged for spot gold, following its failure to break a strong resistance at $1,235, according to Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao.
Bullion was also testing resistance at the 100-day moving average of about $1,225. A convincing break above that is seen as a bullish sign for investors who follow technical signals.
• “We remain neutral on gold here as we do not see the same bullish factors that were evident last week,” INTL FCStone analyst Edward Meir said in a note.
“The dollar seems to be rising again. While U.S. equity action, although mostly negative, is showing signs of stabilizing in that declines are being punctuated by more frequent counter cyclical rallies.”
Reference: Reuters,DailyFX