Gold futures settled narrowly higher on Monday, taking back some of last week’s decline, with investors showing caution after a failed weekend coup in Turkey.
Prices suffered a loss of 2.3% last week, their first weekly loss in nearly two months as record-high U.S. stocks and the Bank of England’s pass, for now, on cutting interest rates lured investors into riskier markets away from nonyielding gold.
“A coup attempt in Turkey late Friday that was quickly quashed, but not without violence, has not had a serious impact on the world marketplace,” said Jim Wyckoff, senior technical metals analyst at Kitco. “Traders and investors reckon the matter was an isolated incident.”
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Prices suffered a loss of 2.3% last week, their first weekly loss in nearly two months as record-high U.S. stocks and the Bank of England’s pass, for now, on cutting interest rates lured investors into riskier markets away from nonyielding gold.
“A coup attempt in Turkey late Friday that was quickly quashed, but not without violence, has not had a serious impact on the world marketplace,” said Jim Wyckoff, senior technical metals analyst at Kitco. “Traders and investors reckon the matter was an isolated incident.”
For Free Signals and other KLSE online updates, click here OR Give A Missed Call : +60350219047 Follow Us On Twitter : www.twitter.com/epicresearchmy Like Us On Facebook : www.facebook.com/EpicResearchMalaysia Need Any Assistance Feel Free To Mail Us at : info@epicresearch.my
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