By Jan Harvey
LONDON (Reuters) - Gold rose to three-week highs on Tuesday as the dollar sank back to a near 8-month low, weighed down by expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep U.S. interest rates lower for longer.
The U.S. currency has been on
the back foot since Fed Chair Janet Yellen last month doused
expectations for near-term hikes in U.S. interest rates, lifting
dollar-priced assets, such as gold.
Spot
gold was up 0.2 percent at $1,259.40 an ounce at 0930 GMT, having
earlier touched a high of $1,262.60 an ounce. U.S. gold futures for June
delivery were up $3.10 an ounce at $1,261.10.
Silver
also broke above $16 an ounce for the first time in nearly a month,
peaking at $16.06 before edging back to $16.03, up 0.8 percent. The
metal rallied 3.6 percent on Monday, its biggest one-day rise in more
than six months.
"Negative
yields in my opinion remain the key reason for buying gold, and silver.
That story will not go away," Saxo Bank's head of commodities research
Ole Hansen said.
"(Gold) found the expected
resistance at $1,255 and it was only when silver took off that it
managed to get through. Silver ETF holdings have risen strongly this
past month while gold has been almost flat. That could indicate some
switch in focus to silver, and the move yesterday highlighted that."
The
gold/silver ratio, which measures the number of silver ounces needed to
buy an ounce of gold, hit its lowest in three weeks as silver
outperformed gold. An ounce of gold now buys 78.6 ounces of silver,
compared with 83.3 ounces in late February.
Speculation
that interest rates will stay low also helped gold and silver in their
own right. Rising rates lift the opportunity cost of holding
non-yielding assets such as bullion.
Scaled-back
expectations for further monetary tightening this year helped gold to
its best quarter in nearly 30 years in the three months to March, after
the U.S. central bank raised rates in December for the first time in
nearly a decade.
Gold
also benefited from weakness in stock markets, as a downbeat first
batch of corporate results prodded European stock markets lower on
Tuesday.
"The more people mistrust these
other markets, the more gold benefits. So the future of the move in
bullion is intrinsically linked to the performances of all the other
markets," Marex Spectron said in a note.
Among
other precious metals, platinum was up 0.4 percent at $993.25 an ounce
and palladium was up 1.5 percent at $553.55 an ounce.
(Additional reporting by A. Ananthalakshmi in Singapore; Editing by Mark Potter)
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