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PRECIOUS-Gold bounces back above $1,900 as UK data renews recession fears

Published 12/08/2020, 02:07 pm
Updated 12/08/2020, 06:48 pm
© Reuters.
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* No sign that gold has bottomed out yet - analyst

* Spot gold up 1.6%, Silver jumps over 5%

* Britain's economy shrinks by record 20.4% in April-June

* Interactive graphic tracking global spread of coronavirus: open https://tmsnrt.rs/3aIRuz7 in an external browser (Recasts, adds comment, updates prices)

By Brijesh Patel

Aug 12 (Reuters) - Gold bounced back above $1,900 per ounce on Wednesday, as weak UK data renewed fears over a coronavirus-driven economic slump and helped bullion erase initial losses fuelled by a resurgent dollar.

Spot gold XAU= jumped 1.6% to $1,942.45 per ounce by 0816 GMT, rebounding from a 2.5% drop in early Asian trade. U.S. gold futures GCcv1 rose 0.2% to $1,949.40. Silver XAG= also joined the rally, adding 5.6% to $26.17.

Underscoring the economic damage caused by the pandemic, data showed Britain's economy shrank by a record 20.4% between April and June, the biggest contraction reported by any major economy so far. they've officially announced that they're into a recession for the first time since the financial crisis. This has supported the sharp rebound in gold and silver," said Jigar Trivedi, commodities analyst at Mumbai broker Anand Rathi Shares.

But European equities largely shrugged off the UK data since it was mostly in line with expectations. .EU

A resurgent dollar, however, weighed on gold, with investors keeping a close eye on a stalemate in U.S. stimulus talks and tensed U.S.-China relations. USD/

"The froth has been blown off the top of the gold market, and now fundamental price discovery is going on," said IG Markets analyst Kyle Rodda. "There's no sign that gold's bottomed yet."

Despite suffering the biggest one-day drop in more than seven years on Tuesday, gold's gains for the year stood at about 28%, as investors buy it as a hedge amid fears of currency debasement, with central banks flooding the global economy with money to ease the pandemic blow.

With policies likely to remain "loose for the foreseeable future," gold could move back towards $2,000, said ING analyst Warren Patterson.

Platinum XPT= gained 2.5% to $953.50 and palladium XPD= rose 3.5% to $2,164.66.

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