Gold bounced back and held above $650 ounce on Thursday with the help of firm oil, but the metal looked vulnerable after several failed attempts to breach key resistance around $660 an ounce. |
Sales of gold scrap from Indonesia and Thailand dominated the physical sector in Southeast Asia, though dealers also noted some buying interest from India, the world's largest consumer. |
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In other precious metals, platinum fell after jumping to a 10-week high of $1,200 on Wednesday on speculative buying as well as purchases by Chinese jewellers ahead of the Lunar New Year later this month. |
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Spot gold rose to $652.70/653.40 an ounce from $651.70/652.40 an ounce late in the US market on Wednesday, when it dropped more than $1 after crude oil reversed gains. |
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"The market remains choppy with gold unable to break out of recent ranges," Investec Australia said in a report. |
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"A concerted break above $660 may open the door for further buying, but in the absence of any break then gold looks vulnerable in the short term to move back below the $650 level," it said. |
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Gold rallied to a six-month high of around $661 an ounce last week but attempts to revisit the level were met by profit taking, in which jewellers and speculators cashed in their holdings. |
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Dealers said gold would have to crack $660 to reach new highs around $670 and $680, with the help of either a weaker dollar or firmer oil. Oil rebounded to $58 a barrel after fuel stocks in the United States were cut by freezing weather and as buyers re-emerged following a 2 percent drop the previous day. |
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"I think the market has lost direction right now," said Louis Lok, a dealer at Bank of China in Hong Kong, adding that gold would be stuck in the $646 to $660 range while waiting for new leads. |
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But gold was likely to find support at lower levels, with physical buyers from mainland China and other parts of Asia keen to buy the metal on a price dip, said Lok. |
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Premiums for gold bars were unchanged at 30 U.S. cents an ounce to the spot London price in Singapore. |
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"We mainly deal with scrap this week but sales from Thailand have slowed down a bit. I would say physical demand is mainly from India," said a dealer in Singapore. |
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