Gold at one-week low as dollar rallies and trade tensions ease

Reuters  |  LONDON 

By Maytaal Angel

The dollar rose to its highest in five days ahead of data expected to show the U.S. economy grew at a 4.1 percent annualised rate in the second quarter, after 2 percent growth in the first quarter.

Global shares were set for a sixth consecutive session of gains, meanwhile, on easing transatlantic trade tensions. Chinese shares, however, were feeling the effects of the lingering trade stand-off between the and China, while the yuan was on course for its seventh straight week of losses.

"(Gold) is tracking the dollar, but the closest correlation right now is between gold and the yuan. Apart from that gold may also be (tracking) the potential impact a strong (U.S. GDP) read could have for interest rates and the dollar," said Ole Hansen, at

A strong dollar makes dollar-priced gold costlier for non-U.S. investors.

Hansen added that while gold is holding above key support at $1,200 an ounce, talk of recovery before the dollar stabilises and the yuan recovers is meaningless because the is hostage to trade war developments and currency threats.

Spot gold was down 0.3 percent at $1,218.92 an ounce at 1009 GMT, having hit a one-week low of $1,217.86, and was on track for its third weekly decline running.

U.S. gold futures for August delivery were 0.6 percent down at $1,218.

The signalled on Thursday that it will push ahead on trade talks with and after agreeing to suspend hostilities over tariffs with in a fragile deal that could clear the way for renewed pressure on

Spot gold is expected to fall into a range of $1,206-$1,214 an ounce, said

In the physical markets, gold demand in improved this week as domestic prices traded near a six-month low, while weaker rates in prompted a pick-up in demand there. Demand remained weak, however, in top consumer as the yuan fell.

Among other precious metals, silver slipped by 0.1 percent to $15.35, heading for its seventh weekly decline.

Palladium was down 0.1 percent at $926.40 but was heading for its biggest weekly gain since the week of April 20.

dropped 0.3 percent to $818.

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

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

First Published: Fri, July 27 2018. 16:15 IST