London - The UK’s shock election result sent gold rallying, but only for British investors. In the rest of the world, prices barely moved.
Gold priced in sterling rose as much as 2.2% to £1 007.52 an ounce, a seven-week high. The move was driven by the pound, which sank after Prime Minister Theresa May failed to win an overall majority.
READ: May fights for survival after Brexit ballot gamble backfires
In dollars, gold retreated 0.4% to $1 273.37 an ounce as the dollar strengthened. Bullion is set for the first weekly loss in a month, sliding 0.5%.
“The political situation is anything but strong and stable,” said Jonathan Butler, a precious metals strategist at Mitsubishi in London. “There is quite a bit of potential for support for gold, certainly in sterling and possibly also in dollars, in the near term.”
Some investors took advantage of higher prices for sterling-priced gold to sell positions, according to BullionVault, a London-based online trading platform.
“Traders were not as active as they were during the early hours of the Brexit referendum result,” Adrian Ash, head of research at BullionVault, said in an email. Volumes were four times higher than normal from 23:00, when the exit polls were released, to 10:00, he said.
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