Gold steadily extends recovery move from yesterday's 3-week lows
• Reviving safe-haven demand lends support.
• Weaker US bond yields provide an additional boost.
• Still set for second consecutive weekly declines.
Gold extended its steady up-move through the mid-European session and recovered part of previous session's losses to near three-week lows.
The precious metal stalled two consecutive days of a sharp slide and was seen benefitting from reviving safe-haven demand. A fresh wave of global risk aversion trade, as depicted by a sell-off across European equity markets, was seen underpinning demand for traditional safe-haven assets, including gold.
The risk-off mood was further reinforced by a sharp slide in the US Treasury bond yields, which eventually provided an additional boost to the non-yielding commodity's modest recovery move on the last trading day of the week.
However, a modest US Dollar rebound, which tends to dent demand for dollar-denominated commodities, was seen capping gains, at least for the time being, with the yellow metal struggling to gains any strong follow-through traction.
Traders now look forward to the US ISM manufacturing PMI and speeches by influential FOMC members for some short-term trading opportunities. Nevertheless, the metal remains on track to post second consecutive week of declines but might still hold within a three-week-old trading range.
Technical levels to watch
Any subsequent recovery move beyond $1280 level is likely to get extended back towards 100-day SMA near the $1285 region, above which the commodity could dart towards $1293-94 supply zone.
On the downside, weakness back below $1274 level might negate prospects for any recovery and accelerate the fall towards the very important 200-day SMA support near the $1266 region.