GOLD PRICES held onto last week's closing level Monday morning in London as the weekend's national elections in Italy – the Eurozone's third largest economy – gave no clear winner overall,
writes Steffen Grosshauser at BullionVault.
Analysts and traders were further worried by US President Donald Trump's open declaration of
a "trade war", with commodity prices slipping and major government bonds rising.
"I think gold prices are up partly because of the uncertainty over the impact of the Italian election on the Eurozone," said Ji Ming, chief analyst at Chinese gold mining group Shandong.
Ahead of the weekend's Italian vote however – widely forecast to result in a hung parliament – hedge funds and other leveraged speculators cut their bullish betting on Comex gold futures and options,
new data said late Friday.
The 'Managed Money' category cut its net long position on US gold derivatives by 15% in the week to 27 February, down to the smallest level in two months according to data compiled by regulator the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).
Speculative betting on silver prices meantime grew more bearish for the third week running, with the Managed Money holding its most negative position since records began in 2006.
Silver prices today slipped back to $16.45 per ounce, some 1.6% above last week's post-Powell drop to 2-month lows.
Italy's vote saw the Eurosceptic 5-Star Movement become the largest single party, but a right-wing alliance including former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi's Forza Italia
was set to gain the most seats.
In Germany meanwhile, the Social Democrats (SPD)
agreed on Sunday to back another coalition with Chancellor Angela Merkel's Conservative Party (CDU), reaching a breakthrough after five months of political uncertainty.
Most European shares advanced Monday morning but Italy's FTSE MIB Index lost more than 1% as the Euro held steady on the FX market.
Gold climbed $5 to touch $1327 per ounce – its highest level since new US Federal Reserve chief Jerome Powell told Congress last Tuesday that he expects to raise interest rates 4 times this year – before retreating to $1323.
Crude oil prices rose 0.5% ahead of a meeting between Opec and other big global oil suppliers, as Libya's biggest crude oil field announced a production halt.
Asian trade overnight saw further gains for the Japanese Yen – often seen as a "safe haven" – ahead of this week's central-bank decisions from Tokyo, Australia and the Eurozone.