Gold headed for a second quarterly loss as holdings in exchange-traded products (ETPs) fell by the most on record and the dollar climbed on prospects for a US recovery, eroding the metal’s allure as an alternative investment.
Bullion for immediate delivery traded little changed at $1,605.97 an ounce at 10:48 am in Seoul from $1,605.25 yesterday. Prices have fallen 4.1 per cent this quarter in the first back-to-back quarterly losses since 2001. The metal touched $1,555.55 on February 21, the cheapest since July 2012.
Holdings in ETPs contracted 6.9 per cent this quarter amid speculation the US Federal Reserve will rein in stimulus. The Dollar Index, a gauge against six major counterparts, rallied to the highest level since August yesterday as the euro fell. Banks in Cyprus planned to open for six hours today with capital restrictions in place after shutting for almost two weeks as the nation faced financial collapse.
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Gold for June delivery was little changed at $1,606.10 an ounce on the Comex in New York. ETP holdings totaled 2,451.01 metric tonnes, poised for a seventh weekly decline. Bullion typically trades counter to the US currency.
While gold and silver lack momentum to go much higher, platinum and palladium have better prospects, as these are less dependent on investment flows, the private-banking unit at Credit Suisse Group AG said in a report yesterday.
Gold rallied for a 12th year in 2012 as central banks boosted stimulus.
Spot platinum was little changed at $1,583.75 an ounce, poised for a quarterly advance. Holdings in ETPs expanded to a record 52.346 tonnes, according to data tracked by Bloomberg.
Silver for immediate delivery rose 0.4 per cent to $28.79 an ounce, paring a second quarterly decline. Palladium was little changed at $766.55 an ounce, headed for a third quarterly gain in the best run since 2010.