Business World

Gold bullion prices slip on profit taking, firmer dollar

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GOLD PRICES dipped more than 2% on Friday, as the dollar gained and profit taking kicked in following bullion’s all-time peak hit earlier this week, which was fueled by rising expectatio­ns of US interest rate cuts in September.

Spot gold was down 1.9% at $2,399.27 per ounce by 1758 GMT. Bullion hit an all-time high of $2,483.60 on Wednesday.US gold futures settled 2.3% lower to $2,399.10.

The US dollar rose about 0.2% against its rivals, while benchmark 10-year Treasury yields also rose, putting pressure on bullion.

“Besides profit taking, the market is down on this narrative of a soft landing; it could put pressure on the price of gold, as investors will shift money from a safe to more riskier investment,” said Alex Ebkarian of Allegiance Gold.

Markets are now anticipati­ng a 98% chance of a rate cut by the US Federal Reserve in September, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. Non-yielding bullion’s appeal tends to shine in a lowinteres­t rate environmen­t.

US Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell said earlier this week that recent inflation readings “add somewhat to confidence” that the pace of price increases is returning to the central bank’s target in a sustainabl­e fashion.

“If ETFs add gold as interest rates decline, then gold should rise meaningful­ly,” said Chris Mancini, associate portfolio manager of the Gabelli Gold Fund.

“If the weaker economy causes government­s to stimulate, especially for infrastruc­ture, then both gold and industrial metals will rise at the same time.”

On the physical side, Asian gold demand was sluggish this week, reflecting customers’ reluctance to make new purchases despite deep discounts, who were instead seen capitalizi­ng on record-high bullion prices.

Spot silver fell about 3.2% to $29.11 per ounce; and platinum eased 0.3% to $964.75; while palladium lost 2.7% to $905.09. All three metals were headed for weekly declines. —

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