Gold price rises on fund purchases, flat dollar

February 25, 2016

London (Feb 25)  Gold rose almost 1% on Thursday as the dollar edged lower and volatility in stock markets stoked demand including fresh buying of bullion funds.

Spot gold was up 0.6% at US$1,235.86 an ounce by 1046 GMT, heading for a third straight day of gains.

The metal seems to have rediscovered its role as a shelter for risk-averse investors, rising 16% this year as global equities have tumbled and fears of a global economic slowdown increased. The metal hit a one-year high of US$1,260.60 this month, further supported by the repricing of expectations for US interest rate rises.

"The technical picture seems a bit changed and at the same time we don't expect rate hikes from the Fed anymore ... we expect gold to reach US$1,300 by the end of the year," ABN Amro analyst Georgette Boele said.

European shares rebounded on Thursday but lower oil prices and dipping Chinese shares rekindled anxiety about the impact of high market volatility on the global economy.

Gold's advance was also helped by a flat dollar against a basket of major currencies, making the metal cheaper for foreign currency holders.

An increase in the holdings of bullion-backed exchange-traded funds (ETF) has also supported the rally.

Inflows into SPDR Gold Trust, the top gold ETF, this year have already surpassed outflows for the whole of 2015. On Wednesday the fund's holdings rose to 760.32 tonnes, the highest since March 2015.

"The ETFs are a good indicator that money is definitely flowing into gold," one Hong Kong-based bullion trader said. "More money will start to flow in if we hold above US$1,250 convincingly."

Gold could gain more because it is on the cusp of a key technical level known as the "golden cross", when the 50-day moving average surpasses the 200-day moving average, analysts said. The gap was less than 50 US cents on Thursday.

If the golden cross occurs, it would be the first such formation in almost two years and would be a bullish buy signal for technical traders and momentum-driven investors.

Among other precious metals, silver eased 0.2% to US$15.25 an ounce, platinum dipped 0.3% to US$934.99 and palladium rose 0.3% to US$486.66.

Soiurce; TheEdge

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