Gold was little changed near a 16- month high in Asia on expectations the Federal Reserve will cut US interest rates, weakening the dollar and boosting the appeal of the precious metal as an alternative investment. |
Dollar-denominated gold prices tend to rise when the US currency falls as the metal becomes cheaper for non-US investors. The dollar traded at $1.3798 per euro at 2 p.m. in Tokyo from 1.3802 late in New York yesterday, near a record low of $1.3852 on July 24. |
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"Fears of US economic weakness have likely revived gold's appeal as a safe-haven investment and inflation hedge,'' Morgan Stanley analysts, led by Hussein Allidina, said in a report. "We continue to believe that rising incomes in Asia will drive gold demand.'' |
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Bullion for immediate delivery was little changed at $702.98 an ounce and Silver for immediate delivery was unchanged at $12.54 an ounce at 1:59 p.m. in Singapore. |
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In Japan, gold for delivery in August lost 21 yen, or 0.8 per cent, to 2,600 yen a gram ($710 an ounce) on the Tokyo Commodity Exchange. Gold for December delivery was little changed at $712.10 an ounce on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange at the same time. |
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Gold has been alternately sold as a commodity and as a means of raising liquidity, while also being bought as a hedge against risk, according to Stephen Briggs, a metals analyst at "The gold rally resulted from a combination of renewed safe-haven buying among professional investors and speculators, reinforced by a substantial improvement in the technical construction on the charts,'' Briggs said in a report yesterday. |
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Hedge-fund managers and other large speculators increased their bets on rising Comex futures prices in the week ended September 4, US Commodity Futures Trading Commission data showed. Speculative net-long positions, the difference between contracts to buy and sell the metal, rose by 26 per cent, or 19,769 contracts, from a week earlier. |
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While solid physical demand will be sustained in coming weeks, "the high component of speculation in the recent move suggests that prices may now need to consolidate,'' SocGen's Briggs said. |
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