Gold prices (XAU/USD) have declined from the $3,369 region, a more than one-week high touched during the Asian session on Monday (August 4th), and currently appear to be stagnating after a relatively strong recovery from last week's one-month low. The US dollar (USD) attracted buying interest earlier this week, reversing some of the weakness triggered by Friday's weaker US employment data, along with a modest rebound in US Treasury bond yields. This, in turn, has been a major factor undermining the precious metal. Source: Newsmaker.id
Asia-Pacific markets are set for a mixed open on Friday, after Wall Street benchmarks the Nasdaq Composite and the S&P 500 posted their worst day in nearly two months on a downbeat Microsoft earnings forecast and MetaTrader results. Traders await a raft of economic data from the region, including Australia's third-quarter producer price index reading and China's Caixin manufacturing purchasing managers' index for October. Japan's Nikkei 225 appears set for a weaker open, with futures in Chicago at 38,470 and its Osaka counterpart at 38,370 against the index's last close of...