Gold climbs as dollar falls on weak US data
Gold climbs as dollar falls on weak US data
Published: 09:02 am Aug 10, 2016
Gold rose early on Wednesday, holding gains from the previous session as the dollar fell, with investors evaluating the likelihood of a Federal Reserve rate hike after a weak US productivity report. FUNDAMENTALS * Spot gold XAU= had risen 0.4 percent to $1,346.18 an ounce by 0107 GMT. Bullion ended up 0.4 percent on Tuesday. * US gold GCcv1 was up 0.4 percent at $1,352.10 an ounce. * Asian shares held near one-year highs on Wednesday as investors pared expectations slightly for a Fed interest rate increase following weak US productivity data, which drove the dollar and Treasury yields lower. * The dollar index, which gauges the greenback against a basket of six major currencies, fell 0.4 percent to 95.831 .DXY. * An unexpected drop in productivity may confirm the Fed's worst fears of a US economy slipping into an extended period of slow growth with little it can do about it. * US worker productivity fell for the third straight quarter in the spring this year, suggesting that corporate profits may continue to decline and wage growth may remain sluggish. * Japanese machinery orders rose more than expected in June in a sign that companies are gradually becoming more willing to increase capital expenditure, which is essential to drive growth in the world's third-largest economy. * British industrial output grew at the fastest rate since 1999 in the second quarter of this year, with 'very few' respondents reporting an impact from uncertainty around June 23's vote to leave the European Union. * Holdings of SPDR Gold Trust (GLD), the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, dropped 0.12 percent to 972.62 tonnes on Tuesday. MARKET REPORT * Oil prices fell 1 percent on Tuesday, extending losses in post-settlement trade after preliminary data showed a surprise US crude stockpile build last week, heightening worries about a global petroleum glut. DATA AHEAD (GMT) 0645 France Industrial output Jun 1400 US JOLTS job openings Jun