Gold headed for the largest downturn in seven years as risk appetite gained after a proposed U.S. tax cut and a rise in bond yields.
Stocks climbed after U.S. President Donald Trump said he’s considering a tax cut on capital gains. That’s reduced demand for gold as a haven, helping notch a third day of declines for the metal. Bullion plunged further below $2,000 an ounce, retreating from last week’s record high, as a slump in U.S. real yields eased. The metal has still gained 28% so far this year, smashing through all-time records.
“It’s quite abrupt and brutal, but the price increase before was even more abrupt and brutal,” Carsten Fritsch, a commodity analyst at Commerzbank AG, said by phone. “The trigger could be the sharp rise in bond yields, which caused some profit-taking and then that cascaded. When people start to take profits, more will follow, and so we see this acceleration of price declines today.”
Exchange-traded fund investors also took a breather, seeing back-to-back outflows for the first since June. On Friday, State Street Corp.’s SPDR Gold Shares, the largest gold-backed ETF, saw its biggest outflow since March. Meanwhile, a Bloomberg Intelligence gauge of senior gold miners dropped the most intraday since March, down as much as 5.7%.
Adding to positive market sentiment is a Covid-19 vaccine that Russian President Vladimir Putin said the country has cleared for use, and it hopes to begin mass inoculation soon. Globally, coronavirus infections breached 20 million cases, after doubling in six weeks. It took six months to reach 10 million. In the U.S., which accounts for a quarter of all cases, virus hospitalizations fell in hardest hit states, including New York, California and Texas.
Spot gold fell 3.9% to $1,949.03 an ounce at 10:25 a.m. in New York. A close at that price would mark the biggest drop since June 2013. Futures for December delivery slid 3.9% to $1,959.70 on the Comex in New York.
--With assistance from Eddie Spence.
This article was provided by Bloomberg News.