Gold hits five-year low under $1,100 on Global cues

Gold prices plunged as much as 4 per cent to their lowest in more than five years on Monday as sellers in top consumer China offloaded the metal.

Investors have been finding less and less reason to hold gold as an insurance against risk, with the dollar strengthening ahead of what is expected to be the first increase in the U.S. interest rates for nearly a decade.

Spot gold fell $45.55 to its weakest since March 2010, at $1,088.05 an ounce shortly after the Shanghai Gold Exchange opened, with volumes soaring to a record.

It regained some ground, trading above the key $1,100 support level, but was still down 1.8 per cent at $1,113.80 an ounce by 1002 GMT.

Spot platinum fell for the fifth straight session, down 5 per cent at a fresh 6-1/2-year low of $942.49 an ounce, due to oversupply, sluggish demand and weaker gold prices, which encouraged speculative selling.

Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen confirmed recently that the central bank might raise interest rates this year if the U.S. economy expanded as expected.

More than three million lots traded on a key contract on the Shanghai Gold Exchange, compared to fewer than 27,000 lots on Friday, Reuters data showed. Before Monday, the volume for July had averaged at fewer than 30,000 lots.

Traders said it appeared that sellers had taken advantage of a low-liquidity environment, with Japanese markets shut for a public holiday, fuelling speculative selling.

“The break of the critical $1,130 support level now makes the technical picture look very weak,” ANZ said. “Short-term supports sit at $1,085 and $1,050, while topside resistance at $1,130 looks pretty solid.”

In wider markets, the dollar hit a three-month high against a basket of currencies, making dollar-priced gold more expensive for holders of other currencies.

China said on Friday its gold reserves were up 57 per cent at 1,658 tonnes at the end of June from the last time it adjusted its reserve figures more than six years ago.

“This implies stockpiling of around 100 tonnes a year, which is dramatically lower than market expectations,” Citigroup said in a note.

Palladium dropped as much as 3.4 per cent to its lowest since October 2012 at $593 an ounce.

Spot silver, the least hit among precious metals in Monday’s slide, was off 0.4 per cent at $14.77 an ounce.

Gold

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Source:Thehindu