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Gold Achieves Liftoff as Prices Rocket Toward $1,400 an Ounce

The metal rallied since late May as investors seek havens amid slowing global growth due to the fallout from the trade dispute.

Gold Achieves Liftoff as Prices Rocket Toward $1,400 an Ounce
Gold rings and necklaces are displayed for sale inside a jewelry store in Hanoi, Vietnam. (Photographer: Maika Elan/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Until this month, gold held claim to the title of being one of the most boring asset classes. Prices barely budged and popularity was fading.

Now that’s all changed. Over the past few weeks, a clear bull case has started to emerge. A key resistance level has broken. Investors are pouring money into exchange-traded funds. The dollar is weakening and the U.S. Federal Reserve seems to be charting a path to cut interest rates. Meanwhile, China is on a buying spree to stock up reserves.

“It has been a long wait,” said Mark O’Byrne, research director at GoldCore Ltd. “Gold has finally broken out, we nearly touched $1,400.”

Gold futures for August delivery rose 3.6% Thursday to the highest for a most-active contract since September 2013, and settled at $1,396.90 an ounce at 1:35 p.m. on the Comex in New York.

Here are four charts that show why gold’s back in the spotlight:

The Fed

Although gold has gathered some momentum in the past few weeks, it was the Fed’s comments Wednesday that triggered the latest spike. While the central bank left its key rate unchanged, it abandoned a reference to being “patient” on borrowing costs. Lower rates boost the appeal of non-interest-bearing assets like gold.

Gold Achieves Liftoff as Prices Rocket Toward $1,400 an Ounce

Other central banks around the world are also adopting a more dovish tone, with European Central Bank President Mario Draghi saying earlier this week that additional stimulus may be needed if the economic outlook doesn’t improve.

Possible Breakout

After years of bumping up against the $1,350 an ounce level, gold may finally be succeeding in a breakout. The metal has breached a five-year resistance line in a dramatic surge that brought it within spitting distance of $1,400 an ounce.

Gold Achieves Liftoff as Prices Rocket Toward $1,400 an Ounce

Gold rallied alongside both haven and risk assets, underlining the shock impact of the Fed’s dovish statement and weaker dollar. While a pullback is possible when the dollar recovers, it will most likely be short and shallow, according to O’Byrne. Citigroup Inc. analysts said a gold price target of $1,500 seems “reasonable.”

“Bond markets have been telling us for a while that things are not right -- economic data has confirmed it -- and now gold has given the negative view of the economy a 24-carat seal of approval,” said Ross Norman, chief executive officer of gold brokerage Sharps Pixley Ltd.

ETF Swell

Investors are pouring money into gold-backed ETFs again, following four months of outflows. Holdings tracked by Bloomberg have already seen the biggest monthly increase since January.

Gold Achieves Liftoff as Prices Rocket Toward $1,400 an Ounce

Bullion producers are also catching an uplift. The $10 billion VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF, which tracks shares of gold mining companies, jumped to the highest in more than a year on Thursday. And a separate gauge of senior gold producers including Yamana Gold Inc. and Barrick Gold Corp. rallied to the highest since November 2016.

Central Bank Buying

In another bullish signal for gold, central banks are continuing to buy the metal as countries diversify their assets away from the U.S. dollar. China increased its reserves for a sixth straight month in May.

Gold Achieves Liftoff as Prices Rocket Toward $1,400 an Ounce

Other countries have also been buying -- first-quarter purchases were the highest in six years, with Russia and China the largest buyers, according to the World Gold Council.

--With assistance from Eddie van der Walt, Justina Vasquez and Joe Richter.

To contact the reporters on this story: Elena Mazneva in London at emazneva@bloomberg.net;Ranjeetha Pakiam in Singapore at rpakiam@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Lynn Thomasson at lthomasson@bloomberg.net, Liezel Hill, Steven Frank

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