Singapore - Gold headed for a third weekly loss before a US employment report that may provide clues on the timing of interest-rate increases.
Bullion for immediate delivery rose 22 cents to $1 177.11 an ounce at 08:28 after falling on Thursday as much as 1% to the lowest since May 1, according to Bloomberg generic pricing. The metal dropped 1.1% this week. Prices in Shanghai sank to a two-month low.
Data on Friday may show US employers continued to add workers in May, strengthening the case for the Federal Reserve to raise borrowing costs this year. Central bank officials have said they need to see more improvement in the labour market, and be reasonably certain inflation will move back toward the Fed’s 2% goal. Higher rates curb gold’s allure as it usually gives returns only through price gains.
“More positive news on the payroll numbers front tonight will excite the US interest rate hawks, and with that the US dollar,” said David Lennox, a resource analyst at Fat Prophets in Sydney. “A rise in the dollar will likely push the gold price lower.”
The report will probably show employers added 226 000 staff in May compared with 223 000 a month earlier, according to the median of estimates in a Bloomberg survey. The unemployment rate is set to hold at 5.4%, the survey showed.
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed after rising 0.3% on Thursday.
Delay rates
The Fed should delay raising interest rates until the first half of 2016, the International Monetary Fund said on Thursday. A stronger dollar, declining oil investment and a West Coast port strike in the first quarter will pull down US growth to 2.5% this year, according to the lender. It previously forecast the economy would expand 3.1%.
Gold for August delivery added 0.2% to $1 177.40 an ounce on the Comex. Metal of 99.99% purity dropped to $1 176.36/oz on the Shanghai Gold Exchange, the lowest since March 23.
Silver for immediate delivery rose 0.1% to $16.1672/oz after slumping 2.3% on Thursday.
Platinum dropped 0.2% to $1 098.31/oz. Palladium dropped 0.1% to $755.40/oz, heading for a fourth weekly drop, the longest run of such declines since October.