Gold fell today as Asian shares reversed early losses and investors
waited for a U.S. Federal Reserve meeting later this week for an outlook
on the central bank's bond buying programme.
Source from (The Malaysian Insider): http://www.themalaysianinsider.com/business/article/gold-slips-as-investors-await-outlook-for-bond-purchases/
Published: Jun 19, 2013
The Fed meets tomorrow and Wednesday against a backdrop of
stronger-than-expected data on U.S. retail sales and the job market,
with markets looking for clues to any tapering of its
economic stimulus programme.
"The
markets are a little bit fatigued at the moment," said Victor
Thianpiriya, commodities analyst at Australia and New Zealand Banking
Group. "They are still looking for direction
from the Fed meeting. That's clearly the big driver this week."
Spot
gold fell 0.2 percent to $1,387.61 an ounce by 0650 GMT. Bullion closed
up about 0.5% for the week on Friday helped by strong demand for coins
and bars, a pullback in U.S. stocks and rising tensions in the Middle
East.
U.S. gold was little changed at $1,387.30, while Asian shares reversed early losses.
Markets
have been volatile since Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke said last month the
bank could scale back its stimulus measures if the economy improves. A
cut in the Fed's $85 billion monthly bond purchases could hurt gold,
which has benefited from its role as a hedge against inflation.
Thianpiriya
said Bernanke was unlikely to deviate from what he has said before, as
it was still too early to determine the timing of a tapering down of the
bond purchases.
Most economists expect the Fed to scale back the
size of its bond purchases by year end, and several expect reduced
buying as early as September, a Reuters poll showed.
Gold prices
were supported by some buying in China, the No. 2 bullion consumer in
the world after India. Shanghai gold futures were up 0.2 percent on
Monday.
However, demand in Asia has cooled from peak levels seen
after the mid-April sell-off in gold. Bullion is down 17 percent for the
year after 12 years of annual gains.
Indian purchases of gold
have fallen since an import duty hike earlier this month. The government
is trying to narrow its current account deficit by reducing gold
imports.
ANZ's Thianpiriya said volumes to India have fallen
significantly in the last two weeks, while those to China were little
changed.
Hedge funds and money managers slashed their bullish
bets in gold and silver futures and options in the week to June 11, a
report by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission showed on Friday.
Gold
output in Australia, the No. 2 producer behind China, fell 5 percent in
the first quarter on weather-related disruption to 63.5 tonnes,
according to the latest Gold Quarterly Review by Surbiton Associates. -
Reuters, June 17, 2013.
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