Metals

Gold hits 3-month high as Fed dampens rate hike expectations

AP

Gold prices hit a three-month high on Thursday after the minutes of the latest Federal Reserve
policy meeting further dampened expectations of an interest rate hike in March, lowering U.S. bond yields and stalling upward momentum in the dollar.

Spot gold was on track for its biggest daily gain since Feb. 6, rising 0.99 percent at $1,249.56 per ounce, while U.S. gold futures rose $18.10 to settle at$1,251.40.

"The dollar's backed off, bond yields have backed off, and that's given a bit of support for gold," said Robin Bhar at Societe Generale.

Gartman's play on strong US dollar and euro-gold
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Gartman's play on strong US dollar and euro-gold

A weaker dollar makes gold cheaper for holders of other currencies, while lower yields reduce the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion. Higher interest rates would lift yields.

Gold had been trapped in a range of around $1,220-$1,240 since early February, with unease over the European and U.S. political outlook supporting demand for bullion as a safe haven while the prospect of rising interest rates kept a lid on gains.

Thomson Reuters technical analyst Wang Tao said gold was likely to break above this trading band, which could give it upward momentum.

The real question about gold
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The real question about gold

"A push above $1,240-$1,245 will be required to entice fresh interest," Sam Laughlin at MKS PAMP said in a note.

The move higher could however be derailed if U.S. stocks continue their rally, enticing investment away from gold, said Jonathan Butler at Misubishi.

"This may in hindsight look like a one-day wonder," he said. Investors were looking ahead to an address by U.S. President Donald Trump to Congress on Feb. 28.

"Currencies, the bond market, gold, will all take their cue from what he says on Tuesday," Bhar said.

More details on promised government spending, infrastructure investment or tax cuts would likely push the dollar and U.S. asset prices higher and gold lower.

"Should Trump become the feared 'unguided missile', which we still believe is unlikely, safe-haven demand would increase even more," Julius Baer analyst Carsten Menke said in a note.

In other precious metals, was up 0.43 percent to $18.10 an ounce. was 0.64 percent higher at $1,008.90 an ounce, and gained 0.32 percent at $770.97.