Gold traded near its highest level in four months on Friday and looked set to post its best week in 11 months, as investors sought safety in the metal after Switzerland scrapped a cap on the franc. Spot gold was steady at $1,261 an ounce by 0042 GMT.
Gold climbs to $1258 on safe haven demand; the Swiss National Bank on Thursday removed the cap on the franc
— Rajalakshmi Nirmal (@crajalakshmic)
January 16, 2015
The metal jumped to $1,266.11 on Thursday, its highest since September, before paring some gains to close up 2.6 per cent. It is up 3.2 per cent for the week, its biggest weekly jump since the week ended February 14.
SNB scraps cap on franc
The Swiss National Bank had shocked the financial markets on Thursday by scrapping a three-year-old cap on the franc, sending the currency soaring against the euro and stocks plunging on fears for the export-reliant Swiss economy.
It was a day of surprises.
#SNB scraps the cap on swiss frac and a 25bps rate cut from the
#RBI
— Gurumurthy K (@gurukmurthy)
January 15, 2015
The U-turn sent the franc nearly 30 per cent higher against the euro in chaotic early trading.
Coming a week before the European Central Bank is expected to unveil a bond-buying programme to counter deflationary pressures, it fed speculation that this quantitative easing scheme will be so big that the SNB would have struggled to defend the cap.
Global equities
The Swiss move sent most European shares soaring, while bond yields and Swiss equities tumbled. US stocks closed lower, marking a fifth straight session of losses.
Asian shares stepped back on Friday and major currencies mostly stuck to late US levels as investors caught their breath, after Switzerland’s unexpected move.
Gold’s leap to four-month highs after the Swiss move was triggered by wider market volatility rather than an improving profile for the metal, analysts said.
SPDR Gold Trust
In a reflection of improving investor confidence, SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, said its holdings rose 1.35 per cent to 717.15 tonnes on Thursday.
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