Gold is headed for the longest stretch of weekly gains since 2011 as investors count down to the release of a highly anticipated US jobs report that could provide clues on the Federal Reserve’s interest rate path.
Bullion is higher for a seventh week as investors bet on looser policy from the central bank after signs of an economic slowdown. 
The non-farm payrolls data  is projected to show an increase of 160,000 in June, up from 75,000 in May but less than a year earlier.
It would take an “absolute blockbuster” result to change the view that the Fed will cut rates at its next meeting, said Chris Weston, head of research at Pepperstone Group Ltd in Melbourne. Lower rates tend to benefit bullion.
Gold is trading near a six-year high as central bankers in top economies turn more dovish, with geopolitical and trade tensions also spurring demand. Veteran investor Mark Mobius said prices could top $1,500 an ounce, citing lower interest rates among the factors that are supporting bullion. Holdings in bullion-backed exchange-traded funds are near the highest since 2013.
“People obviously look at gold as a play on real rates,” Weston said in a Bloomberg TV interview yesterday. “People are looking at the idea that we’re going to have this clear path of central-bank easing. 
The old cliche of putting 5%-10% of your portfolio in gold is something that we’ve been advocating for some time and that allocation can probably be taken up a little bit there.” 
Spot gold climbed as much as 0.6% to $1,424.30 an ounce, before declining to $1,414.03 in London yesterday. Prices are up 0.3% this week. Bullion hit $1,439.21 on June 25, the highest level since 2013.
One wrinkle on the horizon for gold is potentially lower demand from India, the world’s second-largest consumer, after the country raised the import tax on the precious metal for the first time since 2013, spurring domestic prices to a record.
A gauge of the greenback steadied after dropping for three days. US President Donald Trump has accused both Europe and China of weakening their currencies to gain a competitive advantage in trade, and has repeatedly complained about the dollar’s strength. He’s also attacked the Fed for refusing to cut rates.
“Can you actually genuinely pick a G-10 currency that you say that’s really attractive right now?” Weston said. “I don’t think you can, and I think gold’s been working as that kind of best house in a pretty shabby-looking neighbourhood. We’re getting to the point where the US dollar is going to slowly grind down.”
Geopolitical tensions remain elevated. Despite declaring a truce in the trade war last weekend, China continues to stress that the US must remove all the tariffs placed on Chinese goods as a condition for reaching a deal. In addition, British forces this week seized a supertanker off Gibraltar carrying Iranian oil to Syria in violation of European and US sanctions against the war-torn country.
In other precious metals, spot silver, platinum and palladium all declined. Palladium’s drop on the day has trimmed its weekly gain with the metal headed for best run of weekly increases since January 2018.
Related Story