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Trade war talk pushes gold prices higher as dollar eases

Reuters  |  NEW YORK/LONDON 

By and Peter Hobson

NEW YORK/LONDON (Reuters) - Gold prices rose on Friday as the threat of a global trade war pushed equities and the U. S. dollar lower and spurred demand for assets such as bullion that are broadly seen as safe-haven investments.

U. S. Donald Trump's decision on Thursday to place tariffs on imports of aluminium and raised fears of retaliation by other countries and knocked the dollar from a six-week high, making dollar-denominated gold cheaper for users of other currencies. [FRX/]

"Trade in gold today is stepping back and looking at tariffs as a potentially more dovish scenario: weaker economic growth, lower real yields and a weaker dollar are impacting trade," said Rob Haworth, for Wealth Management.

Spot gold rose 0.5 percent at $1,322.54 per ounce by 1:43 p.m. EST (1843 GMT).

U.

S. gold futures for April delivery settled up $18.20, or 1.4 percent, at $1,323.40 per ounce.

Gold, however, was still down 0.5 percent on the week, putting the on track for a second consecutive weekly loss.

Bullion touched $1,302.61 per ounce on Thursday, the lowest level since Jan. 2, pressured by expectations that the will raise interest rates more aggressively than previously thought.

Higher interest rates are gold-negative since they raise bond yields and tend to boost the dollar, reducing the attractiveness of non-yielding bullion.

But the threat of a global trade war overpowered any fears of rate hikes, said

"If a trade war becomes a reality, it could push inflation up and growth down and that should ease the aggressiveness of the Fed. That's why it has become the focus" of the gold market, he said.

Also positive for gold was its ability to hold above its technically important 100-day moving average price at $1,300, also a key psychological level for investors.

Near-term technical resistance was at the 50-day moving average at $1,324.60, analysts at ScotiaMocatta said.

Supporting bullion prices was an increase in holdings of gold in exchange-traded funds tracked by of nearly 17 tonnes, or 1 percent, since mid-February.

"Evidently some investors viewed the low price level as a buying opportunity," analysts at wrote.

Meanwhile, silver gained 0.2 percent at $16.49 an ounce, off a two-month low hit Thursday. It was barely changed from last week.

dropped 0.2 percent to $963.90 an ounce, near two-month lows and down 3.2 percent this week.

Palladium increased 0.5 percent to trade at $993.80 an ounce, but was down 5 percent this week after suffering its biggest fall in over a year on Thursday.

(Additional reporting by in Bengaluru; editing by and G Crosse)

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

First Published: Sat, March 03 2018. 05:04 IST
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