Gold hits three-month high on shaky global economy

Increased volatility in other assets has benefitted gold and it could see more gains


Reuters February 02, 2016
PHOTO: REUTERS

MANILA: Gold edged to a three-month high on Tuesday as weak global manufacturing activity underscored the challenges for the world economy, pushing investors towards safe-haven assets.

Increased volatility in other assets has benefitted gold and it could see more gains as global central banks may be forced into easing monetary policy further this year to spur growth.

Year 2016: Analysts continue to remain bearish on gold

With rates close to zero, the "only option is to move either towards zero or negative rates as the Japanese and selected European countries are already doing in a desperate attempt to force banks to lend", INTL FCStone analyst Edward Meir wrote to clients.

"Whatever the case, this should be constructive for gold."

Spot gold touched $1,130.11 an ounce, its strongest since November 3, and was trading down 0.2 per cent at $1,126.55 by 0226 GMT.

A break above $1,136 could lift gold towards $1,157, a level reached in late October, said ScotiaMocatta technical analysts.

US gold for April delivery was flat at $1,127.30 an ounce.

Reflecting growing confidence in gold, holdings of SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, rose to 21.9 million ounces on Monday, the most since November 3.

Global manufacturing expansion accelerated slightly but remained weak at the start of 2016 as faster growth in developed markets failed to offset a contraction in emerging economies. In China, a gauge of factory activity fell to its lowest since mid-2012.

The US economy could suffer if recent volatility in financial markets persists and signals a slowdown in the global economy, Federal Reserve Vice Chairman Stanley Fischer said.

Gold is typically the asset of choice in times of uncertainty. It posted its best monthly jump in a year in January, and has gained more than 6 per cent so far in 2016, after falling 10.4 per cent last year.

The Fed's statement last week that it will closely monitor the global economy and financial markets lifted gold to near $1,130, as it underlined expectations that US policymakers may take it slow in raising interest rates this year.

Price hits five-year low: All that glitters could now be gold

"Weaker macro numbers out of the U.S. are also increasing the odds that the Fed's December move could have been an outlier, forced onto a central bank that basically had to move after promising to do so for much of the last year," said Meir who sees only one US rate hike this year.

Spot platinum fell 1 per cent to $860.85 an ounce, palladium was steady at $500.16 and so was silver at $14.31.

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