Spot gold -- which last traded at about $1,461 an ounce -- is up 14 per cent this year.
Market
News : Gold’s
impressive advance in 2019 -- aided by trade war frictions, easier
monetary policy across the world’s leading economies and sustained
central-bank buying -- may be set to spill into the new decade.
As
2020 looms, BlackRock Inc., the world’s largest money manager,
remains constructive on bullion as a hedge, while Goldman Sachs Group
Inc. and UBS Group AG see prices climbing to $1,600 an ounce -- a
level last seen in 2013.
Bullion
is heading for the biggest annual advance since 2010, outperforming
the Bloomberg Commodity Spot Index, as a year dominated by trade war
vicissitudes and a trio of Federal Reserve interest rate cuts
propelled the traditional haven to the forefront. Still, with global
equities remaining buoyant and the US labor market proving resilient,
gold’s outlook isn’t clear cut due to uncertainty over what
central banks will do in 2020.
“Economic
growth and inflation remain moderate and central banks continue to
lean toward accommodation,” said Russ Koesterich, portfolio manager
at the $24 billion BlackRock Global Allocation Fund. “In this
environment, any shocks to equities are likely to come from concerns
over growth and, or geopolitics. In both scenarios, gold is likely to
prove an effective hedge.”
Annual
Advance
Spot
gold -- which last traded at about $1,461 an ounce -- is up 14 per
cent this year, on course for the third annual gain in the past four
years, with the only backward step being 2018’s 1.6 per cent fall.
In September, the metal hit $1,557.11, the highest since 2013. While
holdings in bullion-backed exchange traded funds have eased, they
remain near a record.
Geopolitical
and economic risks are likely to feature in 2020 just as they did
this year, which could support gold: a phase-one trade accord between
the top two economies may be close, but the US has pledged to impose
tariffs on more imports if a deal isn’t struck by Dec. 15.
The
US presidential vote looms in November, and before that there is the
possible impeachment of the incumbent. Donald Trump has said many
different things on the trade war, his stance shifting week to week,
including recent remarks he likes the idea of waiting until after the
polls to sign a deal.
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