Gold rises in longest run since October on China rates, US GDP
Posted by Trading Advisor on 12:30 PM with No comments
[SGX] Gold climbed for a fourth day, advancing to the highest
level in almost two weeks, after China announced a second interest rate
cut in three months and the US reported a slower pace of economic
expansion than estimated.
Bullion for immediate delivery rose as much as 0.8 per cent to
US$1,223.29 an ounce, the highest since Feb 17, before trading at
US$1,221.98 by 11:03 am in Singapore, according to Bloomberg generic
pricing. A fourth day of gains would be the longest run since Oct 9.
Prices climbed 0.9 per cent last week for the first weekly increase in
five.
The People's Bank of China lowered the benchmark lending and deposit
rates by a quarter percentage point on Saturday. A day later, a factory
gauge for February signaled contraction for a second month, underscoring
the need for looser policy. The US grew at a 2.2 per cent annualized
rate, down from an estimate of 2.6 per cent, the Commerce Department
said on Friday.
"The slowdown in China remains a huge risk to global growth,
supporting demand for gold," Sun Yonggang, a macroeconomic strategist at
Everbright Futures Co in Shanghai, said by phone on Monday. "Gold
received a boost from the latest US data, which suggests that growth may
not be as strong as perceived." The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index added
0.2 per cent to 1,174.63. The currency rose 0.4 per cent against 10
major peers in February, the least since a cycle of appreciation that
began in July, amid reports of sluggish inflation and the downward
revision of growth. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen signaled last
week that an interest-rate increase isn't imminent.
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