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UBS Says It’s Staying Long Gold as Price Now Destined for $1,600

UBS Group AG, which jacked up price forecasts with a prediction the precious metal may hit $1,600 within three months.

UBS Says It’s Staying Long Gold as Price Now Destined for $1,600
A gold fountain stands at the entrance of a residential housing estate in central Beijing. (Photographer: Stephen Shaver/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Gold will extend its winning ways as the U.S.-China standoff harms growth, risking a deeper slowdown and inviting more central-bank easing, according to UBS Group AG, which jacked up price forecasts with a prediction the precious metal may hit $1,600 within three months.

“The trade war between the U.S. and China has escalated to a new level,” Giovanni Staunovo and Wayne Gordon, analysts at the wealth-management unit, said in a report received on Monday. “Gold has demonstrated its safe-haven qualities and we stay long the metal, a trade we initiated in mid-May.”

UBS Says It’s Staying Long Gold as Price Now Destined for $1,600

Gold is proving its worth as a haven this year as the two largest economies trade blows, with a significant escalation on Friday, followed by more hard-line remarks from President Donald Trump over the weekend. The Federal Reserve reduced interest rates last month as risks mounted, and some U.S. policy makers have stepped up their warnings about the outlook in recent days.

After its revisions, UBS has a three-month trading range of $1,450 to $1,600 an ounce, plus a six-month forecast of $1,600 and 12-month view of $1,650. Previously, both the half-year and 12-month outlooks were set at $1,500.

Futures pared gains in an abrupt move on Monday after earlier rallying as much as 1.8% to $1,565 an ounce, the highest since 2013. The shift was triggered by a comment from Trump that China now wanted to reopen talks.

“The main risk to our call is a back flip by Trump or concessions and deescalation by China, paving the way for a trade deal ahead of the U.S. presidential elections in 2020,” the UBS analysts said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ranjeetha Pakiam in Singapore at rpakiam@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Phoebe Sedgman at psedgman2@bloomberg.net, Jake Lloyd-Smith, Keith Gosman

©2019 Bloomberg L.P.