By Sarah Turner, MarketWatch
SYDNEY (MarketWatch) â Gold futures slipped in Asia trading hours on Thursday to give back some of the gains made in the previous session, but U.S. political divisions over the fiscal cliff helped put a floor under prices.
Gold for December delivery GCZ2 -0.34% edged down $3.90 to $1,726.20 an ounce in electronic trade on the Comex division of the New York Mercantile Exchange.
During the regular Nymex session Wednesday, the precious metal rose $5.30, or 0.3%, to settle at $1,730.10 an ounce.
GFT Markets technical analyst Fawad Razaqzada equated Wednesdayâs gains for gold with a search for safe-haven assets.
âGold and silver edged higher on Wednesday as equities sold off. Investors are clearly worried about the looming fiscal cliff and are appropriately increasing their bullish positions in precious metals,â he said.
Gold needs to close over its $1,740 resistance to attract fresh buyers, he said.
HSBC metal analysts expected gold to benefit as long as the fiscal cliff â more than $600 billion of tax hikes and spending cuts due to start in January if U.S. lawmakers donât reach a deal â remains high on the radar for investors.
âA lack of progress in resolving the âfiscal cliffâ issue would be gold-friendly, we believe,â the analysts said. âThe path of least resistance appears higher for bullion.â
The dollar was barely changed, offering little direction for gold. The ICE dollar index DXY +0.06% , which measures the greenback against a basket of six other currencies, edged down to 81.097 from 81.111 in late North American trading Wednesday.
Elsewhere in the metals complex, silver for December delivery SIZ2 -0.81% traded down 21 cents at $32.68 an ounce.
Copper for delivery in the same month HGZ2 +0.26% rose 1 cent to $3.46 per pound.
December palladium PAZ2 -1.50% fell $7.45 to $634.10 an ounce, while January platinum PLF3 -0.70% declined $6.90 to $1,584.70 an ounce.
Sarah Turner is MarketWatch's bureau chief in Sydney.