Gold rangebound as investors eye trade talks; weak data supports

Reuters 

By Karthika Suresh Namboothiri

Spot gold rose 0.1 percent to $1,313.66 per ounce as of 0722 GMT, while U.S. gold futures gained 0.2 percent to $1,316.90.

"The market is just waiting for a breakthrough. So long as China-U.S. trade concerns are lingering in the market, investors are in ambiguity about where they should go," said Vandana Bharti, of commodity research at SMC Comtrade Ltd.

Two negotiators will meet with Chinese later on Friday, but there has been no decision to extend a U.S. deadline for a deal by March 1, U.S. Donald Trump's said on Thursday.

U.S. tariffs on $200 billion worth of imports from are scheduled to rise to 25 percent from 10 percent if the two sides don't reach a deal by then.

Investors have, since last year, sought safety from the U.S.-China trade dispute in the greenback, which was marginally higher on Friday, capping gold's gains. [USD/]

Spot gold is expected to revisit its Jan. 31 high of $1,326.30 per ounce, as suggested by its wave pattern and a retracement analysis, according to

Gold had gained 0.5 percent in the previous session, its biggest intraday gain since Jan. 30, as disappointing U.S. economic data increased expectations that the Federal Reserve would stick to its dovish stance on monetary policy.

Weak U.S. fanned concerns of slowing economic momentum in the world's largest economy, while China's factory-gate inflation slowed for a seventh straight month in January to its weakest pace since September 2016 .

Meanwhile, British suffered another defeat on her Brexit strategy on Thursday, adding to worries that the is on course to leave the on March 29 without a deal.

"Until there is resolution to these global concerns we might see gold prices rangebound between $1,305 and $1,326," said Brian Lan, at GoldSilver Central in

In other precious metals, palladium was down 0.1 percent at $1,413.50 per ounce. The was still on track for a second consecutive weekly gain, up about 0.9 percent so far.

fell 0.2 percent to $784.25 an ounce, having fallen to its lowest level since Dec. 11 in the previous session. It was set for a second straight weekly fall.

Silver eased 0.1 percent to $15.61 and about 1.5 percent so far this week, which could be its second weekly decline.

(Reporting by Karthika Suresh Namboothiri; Additional reporting by in BENGALURU; Editing by and Shreejay Sinha)

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

First Published: Fri, February 15 2019. 13:24 IST