Source : Investing.com - Gold prices recovered in Asia on Wednesday as
investors await minutes from the Federal Reserve's most recent policy
meeting to determine sentiment on the path of U.S. interest rates in
2016.
On the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, gold futures for April delivery rose 0.07% to $1,209.00 a troy ounce, after dipping earlier in the day.
A story in the Wall Street Journal that hedge-fund manager John
Paulson pared a long-bet on gold in the fourth quarter also dampened
demand for the yellow metal.
Silver futures for March delivery rose 0.14% to $15.355 a troy ounce and copper futures for March delivery dropped 0.27% to $2.044 a pound.
Overnight, gold continued its retreat from 12-month highs on Tuesday,
as investors awaited the release of the Federal Open Market Committee's
minutes from its January meeting for further signals of possible
divergence between the Federal Reserve and other major central banks
throughout the world.
Since surging by more than $60 an ounce to one-year highs last
Thursday, gold has erased nearly all of the gains from the session by
falling back approximately 3.6% over the last four sessions. The
precious metal is still up nearly 14% since the start of the year, on
pace for one of its strongest quarters in 30 years.
Gold likely gained support at $1,063.20, the low from January 4 and was met with resistance at $1,260.80, the high from Feb. 11.
Investors continued to digest dovish comments from European Central
Bank president Mario Draghi on the strong possibility that its Governing
Council will approve further easing measures when it holds its next
monetary policy meeting in March. Speaking before the European
Parliament's Economic and Monetary Affairs Committee in Brussels on
Monday, Draghi indicated that the ECB will not show reluctance to act if
persistent financial market turmoil or low energy prices continue to
impact inflation expectations.
Last month, an ECB survey of 57 economists showed that annual
inflation expectations for 2016 fell to 0.7%, down 0.3% from previous
forecasts three months earlier. While forecasters anticipate that
inflation in the euro zone will increase in each of the following two
years, it is still expected to remain below the ECB's targeted goal of
2% through the end of 2018.
Crude prices have hovered around 12-year lows over the last two
months, while euro zone banking stocks have tumbled in recent weeks amid
concerns related to a rout in the high-yield sector and the
ramifications of the adoption of negative interest rate policies at
major central banks across the continent.
"We will examine the strength of the pass-through of low imported
inflation to domestic wage and price formation and to inflation
expectations. This will depend on the size and the persistence of the
fall in oil and commodity prices and the incidence of second-round
effects on domestic wages and prices," Draghi said.
"In light of the recent financial turmoil, we will analyze the state
of transmission of our monetary impulses by the financial system and in
particular by banks. If either of these two factors entail downward
risks to price stability, we will not hesitate to act."
When the FOMC releases the minutes from its January meeting on
Wednesday afternoon, investors could receive further indications on the
pace of tightening the U.S. central bank will embark on over the next
several months. While Janet Yellen testified last week that it is
unlikely that economic conditions will force the FOMC to cut short-term
interest rates, the Fed chair did not take negative interest rates off
the table.
In late-January, the Bank of Japan spooked global markets by pushing
its benchmark rate below zero for the first time in history. With the
ECB's deposit rate already in subzero territory, it marks the first time
on record that two of the three top central banks in the world have
operated negative interest rate policies at the same time.
Any rate hikes by the Fed this year are viewed as bearish for gold,
which struggles to compete with high-yield bearing assets in rising rate
environments.