· Gold prices jumped 1% to their highest level in more than six years on Monday, as the escalating trade war between the United States and China along with global growth worries drove investors towards safe-haven assets.
Spot gold was up 0.8% at $1,451.37 per ounce as of 0405 GMT, after hitting its highest since May 2013 at $1,455.26.
U.S. gold futures rose 0.5% to $1,464.50.
· “Gold is certainly benefiting from the global concerns about the outlook for growth, and central banks are likely to maintain their accommodative stance, so safe-havens like gold are in demand,” said Michael McCarthy, chief market strategist, CMC Markets.
“Trade tensions between the U.S. and China is an important factor, the potential for escalation is very high... we might not get what markets are fearing, but it is all adding to the real concerns about the outlook for growth assets.”
· On Friday, China said it will fight back against U.S. President Donald Trump’s decision to impose an additional 10% tariff on $300 billion worth of Chinese imports.
The tariffs may force the central bank to cut interest rates more than it had hoped was necessary to protect the U.S. economy from trade-policy risks, experts said.
· Meanwhile, recent economic readings from the U.S. cemented expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates again in September after it delivered its first rate reduction in more than a decade last month.
Lower interest rates decrease the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion, and weigh on the dollar.
· Helping the bullion’s appeal, the dollar index touched a one-week low, making gold cheaper for investors holding other currencies.
· Adding to the global economic gloom, China’s services sector expanded at the slowest pace in five months in July despite a sharp upturn of new export orders, a private survey showed on Monday.
· “Near-term outlook for gold looks positive. All this volatility, growth fears, persistent weakness in economic data will be good enough for risk-off environment,” said Benjamin Lu, an analyst at Phillip Futures.
Further helping gold’s allure, Asian shares slid to 6-1/2-month lows on Monday.
· On the technical front, spot gold may climb into a range of $1,461-$1,474 per ounce, said Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao.
· Holdings of SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, rose 0.36% to 830.76 tonnes on Friday from Thursday.
· Hedge funds and money managers raised their bullish stance in COMEX gold and silver contracts in the week to July 30, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) said on Friday.
· The gold bears had their chance to take control of the market but failed, and now the bulls are in full control as both Wall Street and Main Street expect to see higher prices in the near-term as uncertainty dominates financial markets.
“The bears tried to break the market and they failed so now we get to see what this market is really made of,” said Charlie Nedoss, senior market strategist with LaSalle Futures Group.
With the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy in the rearview mirror, analysts say that global uncertainty and an escalation in the trade war between China and the U.S. will continue to drive gold higher after prices held critical support at $1,400 an ounce.
· Gold: Bulls have their eyes on the 127.2% Fibo target up at $1,560
Gold bulls are in control following last week's fight to safety on the trade war escalations between the US and China. Bulls have their eyes on the 127.2% Fibo target up at $1,560 while trading above the 20-day moving average and the 78.60% Fib.
Gold prices edged higher through the early European session on Monday and climbed to fresh multi-year tops, around the $1459-60 region, in the last hour.
Meanwhile, declining US bond yields continued prompting some follow-through US Dollar long-unwinding trade on Monday, which eventually provided an additional boost to the dollar-denominated commodity or did little to hinder the positive momentum to the highest level since May 2013.
With Monday’s strong upsurge, the commodity now seems to have confirmed a fresh bullish break through the $1445-48 horizontal resistance and hence, a follow-through up-move, possibly towards reclaiming the key $1500 psychological mark, now looks a distinct possibility.
· Elsewhere, silver gained 1.5% to $16.45 per ounce and platinum climbed 1.1% to $851.98.
Palladium eased 0.1% to $1,404.87 an ounce.
Reference: CNBC, Daily FX, FX Street