Gold Ends Higher

December 17, 2014

Washington (Dec 17)  Gold futures snapped a five-day loss to end a tad higher on Wednesday, after having fallen sharply in the previous session amid renewed doubts to whether the Federal Reserve will signal tighter monetary policy later this afternoon.

Nevertheless, the gains were very limited as the dollar strengthened against a basket of major currencies.

Once a foregone conclusion the Fed would remove its "considerable time" pledge from this month's monetary policy statement, now analysts are not sure if that is appropriate, given the economic headwinds outside the US

The Fed is scheduled to make its policy announcement later this afternoon.

Meanwhile, analysts believe  Russia  may be gearing up to sell its gold reserves as it handles a currency crisis that has seen its ruble drop to record lows against the dollar.

Gold for February delivery, the most actively traded contract, inched up  USD0  .20% to settle at  USD1,194.50  an ounce on the Comex division of the  New York Mercantile Exchange  on Wednesday.

Gold for February delivery scaled an intraday high of  USD1,203.10  and a low of  USD1,190.80  an ounce.

On Tuesday, gold futures ended at  USD1,194.30  an ounce, down  USD13.40  or 1.1%, tracking rising global equity markets with investors focused on the US Federal Reserve's monetary policy outcome on Wednesday.

Holdings of  SPDR Gold Trust  , the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, edged down to 721.56 tons on Wednesday, from its previous close of 723.36 tons on Tuesday.

The dollar index, which tracks the US unit against six major currencies, traded at 88.55 on Wednesday, up from its previous close of 87.97 late Tuesday in North American trade. The dollar scaled a high of 88.65 intraday and a low of 87.90.

The euro trended lower against the dollar at  USD1.2428  on Wednesday, as compared to its previous close of  USD1.2511  late Tuesday in North American trade. The euro scaled a high of  USD1.2518  intraday and a low of  USD1.2383  .

In economic news from the US, a  Labor Department  report showed consumer price index to have dropped by 0.3% in November, after coming in unchanged in October. Economists expected the index to edge down by 0.1%.

In economic news from eurozone, inflation came in line with flash estimate in November at a five-year low, final data from Eurostat showed. Annual inflation came in at 0.3% in November, down from 0.4% in October. A year ago, the rate was at 0.9%. The November inflation matched flash estimate released on  November 28  .

From  Europe  , the unemployment rate in  UK  eased to a 6-year low in the three months to October and earnings growth exceeded inflation, boosting scope for strong private spending in coming months. The jobless rate dropped to 6% during August to October from 6.2% seen in the May to July period, the  Office for National Statistics  reported Wednesday. Economists had forecast a rate of 5.9%. This was the lowest since late 2008.

Meanwhile, Bank of  England  policymakers decided to leave its key interest rate at a historic low of 0.50% in a split vote for the fifth straight time at the meeting held on  December 3  and 4. The central bank also unanimously decided to maintain its asset purchase program at  GBP 375 billion  .

The  Asian Development Bank  downgraded its growth outlook for Developing Asia as momentum slowed in the second half of 2014, the  Manila  -based  Asian Development Bank  said Wednesday. The bank said the region will grow 6.1% in 2014 instead of 6.2% estimated in September.

The  ADB  revised  China's  growth forecast down to 7.4% in 2014 from 7.5%, and to 7.2% from 7.4% for 2015. For  India  , the bank maintained a 5.5% growth outlook for FY2014, while indicating the government should extend efforts to reach the 6.3% growth estimate in FY2015

Source: Alliance

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