Reuters has Posted By Gold rises to nearly four-week high as Asian stocks slide, dollar weakensGold held steady
after hitting its highest in nearly four weeks on Monday, supported by a
softer dollar and a slide in Asian stocks ahead of key central bank
meetings this week and Britain's June 23 referendum on its European
Union membership.
The U.S.
Federal Reserve, Bank of England, Swiss National Bank and Bank of Japan
will all meet this week, and are expected to hold monetary policy steady
against a backdrop of caution about the global economic outlook as well
as the impact about a possible "Brexit".
Often
perceived as a hedge against economic and financial uncertainty, gold
has so far gained 5 percent in June and 20 percent for the year.
Spot
gold was nearly flat at $1,273.95 an ounce at 0357 GMT. Bullion had
earlier touched a session best of $1,278.03 an ounce, its highest since
May 18.
U.S. gold was up 0.1 percent at $1,277.40.
"The market is full
of uncertainty over Brexit and also over the interest rate decision by
FOMC (the Federal Open Market Committee) as well as other regional
concerns," said Mark To, head of research at Hong Kong's Wing Fung
Financial Group.
"Gold has been up
and $1,300 should be an immediate target at least for the coming week,
with $1,240 being the support level."
Asian
stocks fell the most in more than two months and the safe-haven
Japanese yen soared on Monday as riskier assets took a hammering.
The dollar fell to a one-month low against the yen and last stood at 106.08 yen, down about 0.8 percent.
Holdings
in SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded
fund, rose 0.74 percent to 893.92 tonnes on Friday, the highest since
October 2013.
Speculators
raised their net long position in COMEX gold contracts in the week to
June 7, and cut their bullish stance in silver, U.S. Commodity Futures
Trading Commission data showed.
"Gold could push a
little higher during the early part of the week, but we expect it to hit
some turbulence by Wednesday, the day of the Fed meeting," said INTL
FCStone analyst Edward Meir in a note.
"That
is when we expect the bank to signal that it is warming up to a rate
increase for July," he said, although adding that the lack of a clear
signal from the U.S. central bank could lead to further gains in gold.
Among
other precious metals, spot silver fell 0.9 percent to $17.16 per
ounce, spot platinum was down 0.8 percent at $982.21 per ounce and spot
palladium was lower 0.2 percent at $541.25 per ounce.
(Reporting by Vijaykumar Vedala in BENGALURU; Editing by Michael Perry and Tom Hogue)
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