· Gold prices rose 1% on Friday as safe-haven buying offset a rush for cash amid fears over the economic hit from the coronavirus, but bullion was headed for a second weekly drop as investors sold the metal to meet margin calls in other assets.
Spot gold gained 1% to $1,484.88 per ounce by 0552 GMT after a 1% fall in the previous session and was en route to post a near 3% decline for the week. U.S. gold futures climbed 0.6% to $1,487.90.
· "It's definitely risk hedge buying. If only for a day ...what can you buy to hedge weekend risk? You can be in cash or precious metals, that's about it," said Jeffrey Halley, a senior market analyst at OANDA.
· Asian shares sought a reprieve following gains on Wall Street, while the dollar crossed a three-year high as the epidemic drove a dash for cash.
· The U.S. Federal Reserve opened the taps for central banks in nine new countries to access dollars in hopes of preventing the outbreak from causing a global economic rout.
Several countries rolled out measures to stem the economic damage, with the U.S. Senate unveiling a $1 trillion economic stimulus plan, while the Bank of England promised 200 billion pounds of bond purchases and cut its key interest rate to 0.1%.
· While gold has been reacting to moves in financial markets and at times found support from stimulus measures, "it's a bumpy ride as liquidity and participation continue to fall by the wayside," said Stephen Innes, chief market strategist at AxiCorp, in a note.
"I'm not so sure this is so much a function of the market, or due to the fact that many gold traders are working at home."
· The global economy is already in a recession as the hit to economic activity has become more widespread, a Reuters poll showed.
· The number of Americans filing for unemployment benefits surged by the most since 2012 last week.
· Among other precious metals, palladium rose 0.5% to $1,660.82 per ounce. Platinum jumped 4.6% to $613.54 but was set to post its biggest ever weekly fall.
· Platinum and palladium will remain turbulent in coming months after huge losses sparked by the spread of the coronavirus, before starting a tentative recovery with support from palladium's supply gap and platinum's correlation with gold, analysts said.
· Silver gained 3.5% to $12.54, but was on track to post its second steepest weekly decline of about 15% since September 2011.
· Gold Price Analysis: Jumps 0.8%, confirming wedge breakout
Gold is currently trading at $1,483 per Oz, representing a 0.8% gain on the day.
The hourly chart is now reporting a falling wedge breakout, a bullish reversal pattern. The hourly relative strength index has broken out of a two-day long sideways channel, validating the breakout on the price chart.
The yellow metal could rise to challenge the immediate resistance near $1,495, which is breached, would expose the psychological hurdle of $1,500.
On the downside, key support is located at $1,545-$1,451. A violation there would imply a continuation of the broader decline from recent highs above $1,700.
The weekly chart RSI is reporting a head-and-shoulders breakdown. As a result, an uptick to $1,495 or $1,500, if any, could be short-lived.
Reference: Reuters, FX Street