Gold price languishes near 2-week low as recovery hopes weigh
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Gold traded little changed on Monday, struggling to break away from a two-week low hit in the previous session, as a brighter global economic outlook dampened gold's appeal a safe haven.
Platinum group metals fared better, with spot palladium hitting its highest in more than 16 months. Platinum metals have industrial applications and benefit from an improved economic mood.
Signs that the euro zone crisis is stabilising and the U.S. recovery is gaining traction drove investors to the higher-yielding equity market, sending Wall Street up for the eighth straight day on Friday.
"The weakness in gold may continue in the short run as weak technicals and upbeat data from key economies put pressure on prices," said Li Ning, an analyst at Shanghai CIFCO Futures.
"Investors would rather move their money into equities or bulk commodities from safe-haven assets."
Spot gold was nearly flat at $1,658.70 an ounce by 0252 GMT, after dropping 1.5 percent last week -- its sharpest weekly loss in a month. It fell to a two-week low of $1,655.39 in the previous session.
U.S. gold inched up 0.1 percent to $1,658.30.
Technical analysis suggested that spot gold could break below support at $1,656 and fall further to $1,647 during the day, said Reuters market analyst Wang Tao. Investors will closely watch the Federal Reserve's policy meeting this week as well as a string of data on employment, economic growth and consumption, to gauge the pace of recovery in the world's largest economy.
In the latest gold holdings data from the International Monetary Fund, Iraq cut its gold holdings by a quarter to 29.9 tonnes in November, reversing some of the country's recent efforts to bolster its reserves.
Physical buying ticked up in Asia, but was lacklustre compared to the past few years when buying typically surged ahead of the Lunar New Year festival, including in China, which is vying with India to be the world's top gold consumer.
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