Gold remained on track for its fourth straight session of gains on Thursday, February 15, as the dollar skidded to its lowest in two weeks on concerns about the impact of high levels of U.S debt and tax cuts.
Spot gold was up 0.2 percent at $1,353.73 an ounce by 1106 GMT after earlier hitting its highest since Jan. 25 at $1,357.08. It had risen 1.6 percent on Wednesday, its highest one-day gain since May 2017. U.S. gold futures were down 0.1 percent at $1,356.8 per ounce.
“We are back to what was driving gold prior to that little spike in volatility last week which is the direction of the dollar and the longer term direction of U.S debt and how it’s going to be serviced,” ICBC Standard Bank analyst Tom Kendall said.
Inflation fears boost gold, which is seen as a safe haven against rising prices. But expectations that the Fed will raise interest rates to fight inflation make gold less attractive since it is not interest-yielding.
BMI Research was neutral on gold prices because of mixed signals from wider financial markets, it said in its gold outlook.
“Key resistance for prices comes in around the 2016 high of $1,375 per ounce and we would have to see this level decisively broken before calling for significant near-term gains,” the research group said in a note.
Among other precious metals, silver was up 0.3 percent at $16.92 an ounce after earlier hitting a more than
one-week high of $16.98.
Palladium was 1.9 percent higher at $1,092.47, after earlier hitting a one-week top of $1,020.90. Platinum was up 0.7 percent at $1,003.90, after earlier hitting $1,007.10, its highest in two weeks.