Gold extends losses to fourth day as fund outflows hit sentiment

Spot gold fell 0.2 per cent to $1,286.65 an ounce

Update: 2014-04-22 11:14 GMT
Photo for representational purposes only. (Photo-DC)

Singapore: Gold extended losses into a fourth session on Tuesday and hovered near its lowest in 2-1/2 weeks on further outflows from bullion-backed funds and stronger equities.

Geopolitical tensions in Ukraine failed to lift gold's safe-haven appeal, underscoring bearish sentiment in the market. Spot gold fell 0.2 per cent to $1,286.65 an ounce. The metal declined to $1,281.40 the day before - its lowest since April 3.

"There's no doubt that the technical picture in gold looks very sloppy (in the short term), especially if key support between $1,277–$1,280 gives way," said Edward Meir, Analyst, INTL FCStone. "Recent ETF outflows and questions about end-user Chinese demand in light of reports that a considerable tonnage of imports was being siphoned off into financing deals, is also weighing on prices," added more .

A World Gold Council report last week said up to 1,000 tonnes of gold could be tied up in Chinese financing deals, indicating a big slice of imports has been used to raise funds due to tight credit conditions, rather than to meet consumer demand. The financing-related buying in the world's top gold consumer means prices could come under pressure if imports are hit by a broader crackdown on using commodities for finance.

Asian shares were supported on Tuesday after Wall Street stocks extended gains into a fifth day. Meir said that gold could still benefit from the Ukraine tensions if more far-reaching sanctions are introduced. An international agreement to avert wider conflict in Ukraine was faltering on Monday, with pro-Moscow separatist gunmen showing no sign of surrendering government buildings they have seized.

US and European officials say they will hold Moscow responsible and impose new economic sanctions if the separatists do not clear out of government buildings they have occupied across swathes of eastern Ukraine over the past two weeks.

In news from the investment side, SPDR Gold Trust, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, reported another drop in holdings on Monday. Holdings fell 3 tonnes to 792.14 tonnes.

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