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Gold rally fizzles, more declines eyed

SINGAPORE, November 10, 2014

Gold slipped nearly 1 per cent on Monday after a short covering rally in the previous session fuelled by a softer-than-expected US jobs report.

Despite a 3 per cent jump on Friday, gold remained below a key $1,180-an-ounce level that could pressure the metal back to 4-1/2-year lows reached last week on a strong dollar and fears regarding an upcoming rate hike by the US Federal Reserve.

Gold got a boost after US non-farm payrolls increased 214,000 in October versus a projected 231,000, hurting the dollar and boosting the metal's appeal as a hedge. But other details of the report were solid with the unemployment rate dipping to a fresh six-year low of 5.8 per cent.

"The rally on Friday may well be overdone as investors mull over the US data and realise the jobs data actually wasn't all that bad," said Sam Laughlin, metals dealer at MKS Group.
    
"We are looking towards resistance around $1,180-85 while support will be sitting around Friday's low print of $1,130."
    
Spot gold fell as much as 0.9 per cent to $1,168.10 before recovering slightly to trade down about $6 at $1,172.99 by 0331 GMT. It fell to $1,131.85 on Friday - its lowest since April 2010 - before recovering to post its biggest one-day gain in five months.

Investor positions show the sentiment towards gold remains bearish and it could plumb new lows before the end of the year.

Holdings in SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, fell 0.78 per cent to 727.15 tonnes on Friday - its lowest in six years.

Speculators slashed their bullish bets in gold futures and options to their lowest in four weeks, the Commodity Futures Trading Commission said on Friday.

Analysts and traders surveyed by Reuters predicted that gold prices could fall to $1,000 by the end of the year for the first time since 2009.
    
The case against gold comes from a stronger dollar, a robust equities market and an improving US economy - a factor that could also prompt the Fed to tighten monetary policy. - Reuters




Tags: Gold | precious metal |

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