NEW YORK: Gold rose above $1,700 an ounce yesterday, a day after it fell under that, in reaction to encouraging United Kingdom GDP growth data and expectations the Bank of Japan will further loosen its monetary policy.
Bullion, a traditional inflation hedge, rose after data showed Britain posted its strongest quarterly economic growth in five years, although temporary effects may have masked a weaker underlying picture.
“The nice U.K. report suggested that the global economy is rebounding slowly, and the fund liquidation we saw earlier this week seems to have dried up,” said Bill O’Neill, partner of commodity investment firm LOGIC Advisors.
Gold rebounded from a seven-week low hit on Wednesday after the US Federal Reserve stuck to its plan to keep stimulating growth until the job market improves but made few surprises. Spot gold was up 0.6 percent at $1,711.30 an ounce by 1:23pm EDT (1723 GMT), rebounding from Wednesday’s low of $1,698.39.
US COMEX gold futures for December delivery were up $10.50 an ounce at $1,712.10, with trading volume to finish in line with its 30-day average, preliminary Reuters data showed. Bullion rallied to an 11-month peak above $1,795 an ounce in early October on optimism after the Fed’s latest program of purchasing mortgage-backed debt.
Momentum has since stalled, leaving prices vulnerable to swings in wider markets, with weak global economic data helping send prices below $1,700. Also, speculation that the Bank of Japan will unveil further monetary stimulus boosted gold. Sources told Reuters the Bank of Japan is expected to ease monetary policy next week by expanding asset purchases. Silver climbed 1.2 percent at $32.03 an ounce. Reuters