Gold rises 1% as coronavirus risks boost rate-cut hopes

Spot gold gained 0.9 per cent to $1,599.15 per ounce as of 0401 GMT.

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Gold plunged over 4.5 per cent on Friday, with precious metals joining a broader market selloff.
Gold rose more than 1 per cent on Monday, recouping losses from a steep slide in the previous session, amid the fast-spreading coronavirus and hopes for a rate cut by the US Fed.

Spot gold gained 0.9 per cent to $1,599.15 per ounce as of 0401 GMT, having risen over 1 per cent earlier in the session. US gold futures rose 2.2 per cent to $1,601.20.

Gold plunged over 4.5 per cent on Friday, with precious metals joining a broader market selloff as investors liquidated positions to meet margin calls in other assets.


"On Friday, the US Federal Reserve board hinted they're going to be dropping interest rates and that's a great thing for gold right off the bat," said Stephen Innes, chief market strategist at financial services firm AxiCorp.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell said that while the US economy remained strong, the coronavirus "posed an evolving risk" and the central bank stood ready to take action if needed.

Lower interest rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion.
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The Fed fund futures showed that traders expect a 75 basis point rate cut by the US central bank in its March monetary policy meeting.

"The dollar is weaker, the euro strengthened, and this (suggests) gold will go up," Innes said, adding the negative correlation between the US currency and the yellow metal has materialised again since the dollar's safe-haven appeal has faded.

Expectations for a rate cut also supported other safe havens, with the benchmark US 10-year Treasury yields falling to a record low and the Japanese yen rising to its highest since October.

World stocks fell further as investors were rattled as weekend data from China raised fears of a global recession.
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Factory activity in China contracted at the fastest pace ever in February, even worse than during the global financial crisis, data showed on Saturday, highlighting the damage from the outbreak.

Other metals also regained some ground following Friday's free fall, with palladium rising 1.7 per cent to $2,638.21 per ounce after shedding as much as 13 per cent at one point - its biggest one-day percentage decline since the 2008 financial crisis - in the last session.
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Platinum gained 1.6 per cent to $877.52, while silver rose 1.8 per cent to $16.95, after both metals fell to their lowest in about six months in the previous session.
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