Gold reaches seven-month high as stocks, dollar struggle
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[January 29, 2019]
By Marc Jones
LONDON (Reuters) - Gold climbed to a seven-month high on Tuesday as
markets opted for caution before three major macro events and a blizzard
of big tech company earnings in the coming days, starting with Apple
later.
Despite the upcoming action - a key Brexit vote in the UK , Wednesday's
U.S. Federal Reserve decision and Thursday's conclusion of the latest
Sino-U.S. trade talks - European and Asian stocks held up relatively
well.
London's FTSE rose 1 percent and Frankfurt and Paris both made some
ground. Utilities and other safety plays benefited from a series of U.S.
profit alerts, including from digger maker Caterpillar, overnight.
News that the U.S had leveled charges against China's telecom giant
Huawei days before the next round of trade talks between Washington and
Beijing knocked sentiment.
But it was offset by promises of more economic stimulus from China,
which had berated Washington on Monday for blocking the appointment of
judges for its World Trade Organisation appeal against U.S. tariffs.
Amid the turmoil, gold broke through $1,300 an ounce to reach its
highest since mid June.
"Investors are very cautious with many uncertainties on U.S.-China trade
talks and Brexit. Huawei is at the center of dispute, creating very
noisy background for the trade talks," said Margaret Yang, a market
analyst at CMC Markets.
"All these are making it more difficult for investors to judge the
market's direction. Money is fleeing into assets such as gold, seeking
safety." ,"
The U.S.-Sino moves, as well as bets that the U.S. Fed will sound more
cautious on Wednesday, kept the dollar near a two-week low and
heightened the safe-haven appeal of the Japanese yen and the Swiss
franc.
Sterling held at $1.3166 and 86.88 pence to the euro before crucial
votes later in the day aimed at breaking a deadlock in the UK parliament
over Brexit .
The pound has rallied 6 percent from Jan. 4 lows, but further gains may
be limited unless lawmakers emerge with a big majority on the votes.
Most European government bond yields were little changed. Weaker
economic data and unknowns like the trade feuds and Brexit have all
boosted expectations that interest rates will stay low.
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An employee stores
newly cast ingots of 99.99 percent pure gold at the Krastsvetmet
non-ferrous metals plant, one of the world's largest producers in
the precious metals industry, in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk,
Russia November 22, 2018. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin/File Photo
New debt deals from Greece, Belgium and Austria were also in the pipeline. The
slide in rates has also encouraged governments to launch new bond deals. Even
Angola, which has just taken IMF aid, said it was eyeing a bond sale.
In Asia, shares were mixed, with losses for Australia and New Zealand, with
their benchmark indices down 0.5 percent and 1.2 percent respectively. Japanese
and Chinese stocks both recovered from early wobbles to finish in the green.
WARNING BELLS
Markets will have more catalysts this week with over 100 of the S&P500 companies
reporting results, including Amazon, Apple and Facebook.
Overnight on Wall Street, the Dow and S&P 500 each closed down 0.8 percent and
the Nasdaq was off more than 1 percent.
The losses came after Caterpillar and Nvidia Corp joined a growing list of
companies cautioning about the crippling effects of softening Chinese demand.
"Both companies are seen as industry bellwethers, and their disappointing
results provide further evidence that this time China's slowdown is for real,"
said Rodrigo Catril, Sydney-based strategist at National Australia Bank.
Worryingly, earnings at China's industrial firms too shrank in December,
pointing to more troubles for the country's vast manufacturing sector, which are
already struggling with a decline in orders, job layoffs and factory closures.
Oil recovered after overnight losses. U.S. crude was last up 35 cents at $52.34
a barrel; Brent gained 37 cents to $60.30.
Washington imposed sanctions on Venezuelan state-owned oil company PDVSA on
Monday, a step that is likely to curb its crude exports to the U.S. and ratchet
up the pressure on President Nicolas Maduro.
(Reporting by Marc Jones, editing by Larry King)
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