Gold flat, holds near four-month highs as dollar slips

Reuters  |  NEW YORK/LONDON 

By and Peter Hobson

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - prices hovered near four-month highs on Wednesday as the U. S. dollar slipped against a basket of currencies.

In see-saw trading, the dollar had risen early against the as the single backed away from a three-year high. But the greenback later slipped.

Spot was flat, last up 0.1 percent at $1,339.44 an ounce by 1:58 p.m. EST (1858 GMT). It remained close to Monday's peak of $1,344.44, its highest since Sept. 8.

U.

S. futures for February delivery settled up $2.10, or 0.2 percent, at $1,339.20 per ounce.

"The is driving the dollar, which is then driving the now," said Michael Matousek, at in

The price of has risen by 8 percent since mid-December, lifted as the dollar weakened to a three-year low against a basket of major currencies. <. DXY>

"For the moment it looks like appears intent on challenging the 2017 highs around $1,357," said Daniel Ghali, at in

prices could move higher if U. S. Republicans and Democrats fail to pass a spending bill by Friday to avoid a possible government shutdown, said The said it would support a short-term bill.

Longer-term, will be supported by risk that global share prices could fall from record highs and strong growth around the world could stoke

"Concerns regarding (share price) overvaluations and the possibility of rising have reignited interest in gold," analysts said in a note.

Funds' bets on higher prices have surged, with their net long positions rising to almost 200,000 contracts from fewer than 80,000 in mid-December. <1088691mnet>

"The past three weeks have seen the fastest rise in speculative positioning in on record," analysts said.

But the net long was still only 36 percent of total open positions and could rise further, which would help to drive prices higher, they added.

On technicals, resistance was at $1,350, Matousek added.

"We've had this nice long run since the middle of December that was orderly. Most people will lighten up, up there, then buy back," he said.

In other precious metals, silver dipped 0.1 percent at $17.17 an ounce while platinum rose 0.7 percent at $1,005.60 after touching its highest since Sept. 8 at $1,006.60.

Palladium rose 2.1 percent at $1,116.47 an ounce, close to the $1,138 record high hit on Monday.

(Additional reporting by in Bengaluru; Editing by and David Goodman)

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Thu, January 18 2018. 00:58 IST