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- Dollar moves away from 3-week high
- ECB, BOE meetings due later on Thursday
- U.S. weekly jobless claims due at 1330 GMT
- $1,840-$1,850 could be year-end resistance for gold – analyst
Dec 16 (Reuters) – Gold prices rose on Thursday as the dollar retreated after the U.S. Federal Reserve decided to end its pandemic-era bond purchases in March, with investors now awaiting policy decisions from other major central banks.
Spot gold rose 0.5% to $1,785.93 per ounce by 0834 GMT, while U.S. gold futures leapt 1.3% to $1,786.70.
“Any dollar weakness should see a corresponding rise in gold. The expectation is for a winding back of fiscal and monetary stimulus, if this view is unchanged then it would be reasonable for gold prices to remain below $1,800,” said Michael Langford, director at corporate advisory AirGuide.
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The dollar index (.DXY) weakened from a three-week high scaled in the previous session after the U.S. central bank said it would pave the way for three quarter-percentage-point interest rate increases by the end of 2022 as the economy nears full employment and the Fed copes with accelerating inflation. read more
Reduced stimulus and interest rate hikes tend to push government bond yields up, raising the opportunity cost of holding bullion, which bears no interest.
ECB officials are set to call time on the central bank’s Pandemic Emergency Purchase Programme but investors will look to see how the six-year-old Asset Purchase Programme may pick up the slack, though rate rises are a way away. read more
Meanwhile, U.S. weekly initial jobless claims data is due at 1330 GMT.
“The unemployment data will not have a large impact on gold … we have monetary policies from the European region, so that may put some pressure on gold prices but overall, the sentiment is positive,” said Jigar Trivedi, a commodities analyst at Mumbai-based broker Anand Rathi Shares.
“The year-end sees $1,840-$1,850 as a resistance for gold.”
Silver rose 0.5% to $22.16 per ounce. Platinum and palladium gained 0.7% to $925.04 and 3.5% to $1,653.10, respectively.
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Reporting by Seher Dareen and Asha Sistla in Bengaluru; Editing by Subhranshu Sahu and Sherry Jacob-Phillips
Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.