Gold sinks most in year as trade truce deals blow to bulls
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Gold sinks most in year as trade truce deals blow to bulls

Gold prices tumble after the United States and China reached a truce in their trade war on Saturday. (Reuters photo)
Gold prices tumble after the United States and China reached a truce in their trade war on Saturday. (Reuters photo)

Gold tumbled back below US$1,400 an ounce after the United States and China reached a truce in their trade war, dealing a blow to havens.

Prices fell the most in a year after Donald Trump and Xi Jinping agreed to resume negotiations. Still, the setback may be temporary as investors now train their focus on US jobs data due Friday for clues on the Federal Reserve’s next move on policy.

“Gold was well overdue a period of consolidation and gold bulls should welcome it,” said Ross Norman, chief executive officer of gold brokerage Sharps Pixley Ltd. “This provides a welcome entry point.”

Bullion hit a six-year high last week as top central banks including the US Federal Reserve adopted a more dovish tone and tensions spiked between the US and Iran. Driven by speculation that US interest rates may soon be headed lower, investors plowed into bullion-backed exchange-traded funds, which swelled 5% in June, the most since 2016.

Spot gold dropped as much as 2%, the biggest intraday decline since June 2018, and was at $1,391.68 at 12.40pm in London. Prices rallied 8% last month. A gauge of the US dollar rose 0.2% on Monday after sagging 1.6% in June.

Gold’s pull-back was a natural reaction to the dollar-friendly news, said David Govett, head of precious metals trading at Marex Spectron Group in London.

“I don’t think we collapse from here, but I do think we have seen the highs now.”

After meeting Xi, Trump said he would hold off imposing additional tariffs on Chinese imports and delay restrictions against Huawei Technologies Co, letting US companies resume sales to China’s largest telecommunications equipment maker. Further details on the deal were light though.

With China-US trade tensions temporarily out of the way, gold traders’ focus is back toward fundamentals, and “fundamentals are still reasonably ok,” Wei Li, head of iShares EMEA investment strategy at BlackRock, told Bloomberg Television.

Still, prices were seen remaining under pressure on Monday on improved risk sentiment, with the downside seen at $1,380 and further declines dependent on the dollar strengthening more, Mumbai-based Kotak Securities Ltd said in a note.

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