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Gold beaten down on Fed’s rate-hike countdown

Singapore - Gold traded near a 10-month low before an interest rate decision from the Federal Reserve, with investors expecting policy makers led by chair Janet Yellen to deliver the central bank’s first hike of the year just as US equities power to records.

Bullion for immediate delivery was at $1 159.97 an ounce at 08:49 from $1 158.54 on Tuesday, when prices fell for the third time in four days, according to Bloomberg generic pricing. The metal sank to $1 151.44 on Monday, the lowest since February, as fund holdings shrank.

Gold has been battered in the final quarter of the year, and is the worst performer after sugar on the Bloomberg Commodity Index, as the Fed gears up to tighten and on growing optimism that a Donald Trump presidency will spur growth.

The S&P 500 Index and the Dow Jones Industrial Average are at all-time highs, providing an alternative to non-interest bearing bullion. A gauge of the dollar is near the highest since at least 2005.

“Gold is going to be the least likely candidate for investors to put their money into among all the commodities in 2017,” Bob Takai, chief executive officer and president of Sumitomo. Global Research, said by phone from Tokyo. Prices may trade between $1 050 and $1 250 next year, although bullion may get support from any geopolitical tensions arising from Trump’s diplomatic and foreign policies, according to Takai.

Holdings in exchange-traded funds are spiraling lower with prices, contracting for a 23rd straight day as of Tuesday in the longest losing stretch since May 2013. The assets fell 1.1 metric tons to 1 830.6 tons, the lowest since June, data compiled by Bloomberg show.

‘Stumbling block’

“The strong dollar, rising interest rate is definitely going to be a very big stumbling block for the gold price,” said Takai. “Maybe people want to buy crude oil and base metals, which are going to be benefited by fiscal policy by China and fiscal policy of the US”

While the rate increase may hit bullion initially, gold could still perform well if real interest rates remain low. The Fed’s previous hiking cycle took place from June 2004 through June 2006, when it increased by 25 basis points 17 straight times. Gold climbed those three years. It also surged in the first half of 2016 in the wake of last year’s inaugural rate increase.

Views differ on the outlook. Singapore-based Oversea-Chinese Banking, the most accurate bullion forecaster tracked by Bloomberg in the third quarter, said last week that it expects lower prices in 2017 as the Fed delivers two additional rate increases.

For the bulls, Commerzbank has forecast prices may rise to $1 300 by the final quarter of next year and $1 400 in 2018 on low real rates and increased demand, with additional upside from potential global upsets. The London-based manager of the Old Mutual Gold & Silver Fund expects gold will strengthen as the Fed fails to increase rates fast enough to keep up with inflation.

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