Gold fell on Tuesday to track sliding oil, with a weaker
euro also prompting investors to turn their back on the metal
ahead this week's Federal Reserve meeting on interest rates.
Gold often takes cues from movements in the dollar because
of its role as an alternative investment to currencies, stocks
and bonds. The outcome of the Fed meeting would set the tone
for currencies and precious metals, said dealers.
Gold fell to $887.50/888.50 an ounce from $891.65/892.65
late in New York on Monday, when it hit an intraday day high
of $895.50 an ounce on speculative buying driven by record
high oil.
Trading was thin with Japanese players away for a holiday.
(Article continues below)
"Everybody is waiting for the Fed," said Ronald
Leung, director of Lee Cheong Gold Dealers in Hong Kong.
"I think gold has to stay above these levels before
it can charge higher again. The range is still the same at
between $880 to $900 for today and tomorrow."
Gold was still trading well below a lifetime high of $1,030.80
an ounce hit on March 17, with attempts to revisit the level
met by heavy profit taking.
Full
article here.