Gold Ends Lower On Strong Dollar, US Data

September 24, 2014

Washington (Sept 24)   Gold futures snapped a two-day gain to end lower on Wednesday, tracking rising global equity markets with investors opting for the more riskier assets. The precious metal found little support with the dollar trending higher on some upbeat economic news from the US showing new home sales to have risen more than expected in August.

Gold ticked higher earlier in the day on continued geopolitical worries with the US President  Barack Obama  calling for more nations to join the fight against Islamic militants in  Syria  and  Iraq  .

In some upbeat economic news, new home sales in the US showed a substantial increase in August, with the annual rate of sales at its highest level in over six years.

Gold for December delivery, the most actively traded contract, dropped  USD2.50  or 0.2% to settle at  USD1,219.50  an ounce on the Comex division of the  New York Mercantile Exchange  on Wednesday.

Gold for December delivery scaled an intraday high of  USD1,226.70  and a low of  USD1,216.20  an ounce.

On Tuesday, gold futures ended higher, lifted by weak global equity markets. Geopolitical concerns after the US and at its Arab allies launched airstrikes on Islamic militants in  Syria  and a weaker dollar also helped gold steady after touching its lowest in nine months.

Holdings of  SPDR Gold Trust  , the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, edged down to 773.45 tons from its previous close of 774.65 tons on Tuesday.

The dollar index, which tracks the US unit against six major currencies, traded at 85.01 on Wednesday, up from its previous close of 84.70 late Tuesday in North American trade. The dollar scaled a high of 85.09 intraday and a low of 84.60.

The euro trended lower against the dollar at  USD1.2787  on Wednesday, as compared to its previous close of  USD1.2848  late Tuesday in North American trade. The euro scaled a high of  USD1.2863  intraday and a low of  USD1.2774  .

In economic news, a  Commerce Department  report showed new home sales in the US increase substantially in August, with the annual rate of sales at its highest level in over six years. New home sales surged up 18.0% to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 504,000 in August from the upwardly revised July rate of 427,000. Economists expected new home sales to climb to an annual rate of 430,000 from the 412,000 originally reported for the previous month.

From the eurozone, German business confidence weakened for the fifth straight month in September adding to signs that the largest euro area economy is set to see a slow recovery, a survey by the Ifo institute showed Wednesday. The Ifo business climate index dropped more-than-expected to 104.7 in September from 106.3 in August. This was the lowest score since  April 2013  , when the reading was 104.2. Economists had forecast the indicator to drop to 106.3 in August.

Meanwhile, the  European Central Bank  President  Mario Draghi  said Wednesday that euro area interest rates are likely to remain low for a long period of time and the bank is ready to use all possible tools to bring inflation back to the 2% target.

"Interest rates will stay at the present level for an extended period of time because they can't go much lower than that," he said.

Source: AllianceNews

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