
Gold will continue to shine amid a weak dollar, says author and gold pro Jim Rickards.
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Gold prices rose on Friday as the China coronavirus stoked fears of a wider epidemic that could hamper economic growth.
Spot gold was 0.64% higher at $1,572.84 per ounce but held above the key $1,550 level, supported by the prospect of easy monetary policy globally. U.S. gold futures jumped 0.4% to $1572.4 per ounce.
The Center for Disease Control and Prevention announced a second case of the deadly coronavirus in Chicago on Friday. The CDC also said 63 patients in 22 states are under investigation for coronavirus infection.
The spread of the virus ahead of the Lunar New Year, a peak period of travel and gold demand in China, kept investor concerns heightened.
“Gold prices are facing headwinds from gaining equities and a stronger dollar but it is unlikely to fall below $1,520 as a bunch of geo-political uncertainties still exist,” Saxo Bank analyst Ole Hansen said.
Furthermore, the dollar hovered close to a more than one and half month high against a basket of currencies, making gold expensive for buyers holding other currencies.
“With a low interest rate environment, geopolitical risks and uncertainties such as U.S. President’s impeachment, the conditions are still quite conducive to further upside in gold,” ANZ analyst Daniel Hynes said.
After the European Central Bank left rates unchanged on Thursday, investors are looking to the U.S. Federal Reserve’s first meeting of the year scheduled on Jan. 28-29.
However, in the short-term, “the Libya oil issue and the coronavirus have not helped (gold) much and if this continues, we might see a challenging quarter ahead,” Saxo Bank’s Hansen said.
Libya earlier this week declared force majeure on two major oilfields following a military blockade, and protests escalated in Iraq, pushing investors towards safe-haven assets.
Holdings of the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, SPDR Gold Trust, rose 0.2% to 900.58 tonnes on Thursday.
Elsewhere, palladium dipped 0.6% to $2,447.11 per ounce, and was on track to register its first weekly fall in five at about 1.3%.
Silver rose 0.2% to $17.82 per ounce but was set to post its biggest weekly decline since early-December at nearly 1%. Platinum rose 0.2% to $1,004.44, but was down 1.4% for the week, its worst since the week ended Dec. 20.













