There are a number of factors supporting gold prices, reports Fawad Razaqzada, Market Analyst, Forex.com.

Gold is continuing to push higher as the new week gets underway. At $1,325 per ounce, the precious metal is trading just under its 2019 high of $1,326 it hit at the end of January. Gold is now not too far off the 2018 peak of $1,366, where it is potentially heading to over the coming weeks. 

There are a number of factors supporting gold prices at the moment. For a start, the dollar’s bullish momentum appears to have faded since the middle of last week and this has given most dollar-denominated assets a direct boost. Although there were pockets of strength in some areas of the economy, last week’s data releases from the United States were overall disappointing. Among other things, we had a weaker-than-expected inflation report, an unexpected slump in retail sales and a drop in the latest industrial production data.

While lower inflation numbers are not helpful to gold as many speculators buy gold as an inflation hedge, renewed weakness in U.S. data has caused investors to push their U.S. rate hike expectations further out, preventing government bond yields from rising and supporting low-yielding and noninterest-bearing assets like gold.

Although the economic calendar is light today, and U.S. markets will be closed in observance of Presidents' Day, the dollar has weakened a little further at the start of this week. If we see further deterioration in upcoming U.S. data, then the dollar could extend its decline and underpin gold even more. However, there isn’t a great deal of U.S. data to look forward to this week, with the exception of the FOMC’s last meeting minutes and durable goods orders in mid-week. We will have important data from other regions of the world, so some dollar pairs could be impacted, although this will unlikely cause too much volatility for gold. In the absence of any major fundamental catalyst to prevent ongoing bullish momentum, the metal could drift further higher over the coming days.

Meanwhile gold, along with other commodities, has found additional support from positive news on U.S.-China trade negotiations. While a deal may not be reached in time for the March 2 deadline, the positive vibes coming out of the latest meetings point to an eventual resolution in the trade dispute. A deal, if reached, would probably strengthen the yuan, which could be beneficial for commodity buyers in China purchasing assets traded in dollars like gold.

As mentioned above, gold is just sitting below its 2019 high. Having gained ground over the past four months, the bulls will be happy to see that the metal has now turned positive in February. Thus, it is on track to push higher for the fifth consecutive month. Bullish momentum is building, which could help inspire an eventual breakout above a band of resistance in the $1,365-80 range, where the metal had struggled over the past few years. We would drop our bullish bias in gold if and when we see a breakdown in the market structure of higher highs and higher lows.

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Source: TradingView and FOREX.com.