RTRS:PRECIOUS-Gold eases for 3rd session as stocks, euro retreat
* Gold edges lower in line with European equities
* U.S. budget talks watched for direction
* India gold importers eye rupee for price direction
(Updates throughout, changes dateline, pvs SINGAPORE)
By David Brough
LONDON, Dec 17 (Reuters) - Gold prices dipped for a third
session on Monday, easing in line with stock markets and the
euro, as uncertainty over the outlook for U.S. budget talks and
a weak chart picture kept potential buyers on the sidelines.
Prices last week broke below their 100-day moving average,
which had been a strong support level at $1,703 an ounce. Gold
is now trading below a number of key moving averages, suggesting
the trend in the metal is weak.
Spot gold was down 0.33 percent to $1,689.51 an ounce
by 1117 GMT after falling nearly half a percent in the previous
week. U.S. gold was down 0.37 percent to $1,689.50.
The metal briefly rose to a two-week high above $1,720 an
ounce last week after the U.S. Federal Reserve pledged to buy
$45 billion a month in longer-term Treasuries, a potentially
inflationary move that was expected to support gold.
It swiftly retraced those gains, however, in line with other
financial markets as investors prepared for year-end.
"This (move in gold) is primarily technical, a continuing
ease-back after the FOMC announcement last week," Tom Kendall,
head of precious metals research at Credit Suisse, said.
"Technically the chart is looking more bearish. The path of
least resistance is now to the downside." Prices were drifting
towards the low end of recent ranges towards year-end, he said.
On the wider financial markets, European shares and the euro
retreated as investors focused on the fast approaching year-end
deadline to avoid the imposition of steep tax hikes and spending
cuts in the United States, known as the "fiscal cliff".
A new proposal for tax hikes on incomes over $1 million a
year from U.S. Republican House Speaker John Boehner on Sunday
was seen as a step forward, but it still remained some way from
the position of President Barack Obama.
Credit Suisse's Kendall said gold was taking little support
from speculation over the cliff at present.
"If the markets were very concerned about the lack of
agreement to date or the potential impact of the fiscal cliff in
the first quarter of 2013, you would expect to see gold higher
than it is, especially considering the relative weakness of the
dollar against the euro," he said.
INDIAN DEMAND
Gold demand in India, currently neck and neck with China as
the world's biggest buyer of the metal, was soft as buyers
awaited a key rate decision from the Reserve Bank of India (RBI)
for its impact on the rupee.
"(The) market is very much in a range like the rupee, so the
physical market is dull. They are all waiting for the RBI
meeting tomorrow," one dealer with a private bullion importing
bank in Mumbai said.
Hedge funds and money managers raised their bullish bets on
U.S. gold futures and options to 129,865 contracts in the week
ended Dec. 11, up from a more than three-month low of 126,073
lots in the previous week.
But they cut net length in silver to 34,862 lots, the lowest
since late November.
"Gold's post-FOMC price action has been muddied by other
factors, such as (profit/loss) considerations, as year-end nears
and uncertainty regarding the U.S. fiscal cliff lingers," UBS
said in a note. "Nevertheless, it cannot be ignored that, at
least in the near term, investor confidence has taken a hit."
"Gold net longs were little changed," it said. "The subdued
spec activity is a testament to the market's growing lack of
appetite to take any large positions closer to year-end."
Among other metals, spot silver was down 0.03 percent
at $32.14 after earlier falling to a one-month low of $32.08,
just below its 100-day moving average at $32.14.
Spot palladium lost 0.93 percent to $693.47, after
rising for seven weeks straight, its longest winning streak in
more than two years. Platinum was down 0.74 percent at
$1,601.99 per ounce.