Gold drifted lower with shares on Friday and headed for a weekly loss, as investors focused on uncertainty over global growth and worries over the so-called US "fiscal cliff". Spot gold edged down 0.39 percent to $1,708.54 an ounce by 1242 GMT, on track for a weekly loss after prices climbed more than 3 percent last week.
US gold was down $4.80 at $1,709.00. Gold had slid more than 1 percent to a one-week low on Thursday following falls in equity markets. European shares fell for a third day on Friday as the weak economic outlook, uncertainty over US budget talks and an upsurge of violence in the Middle East weighed on investors.
Gold edged down as some investors liquidated profits from bullion to cover losses in other markets such as equities. Investors see gold as a risky asset similar to other commodities or shares. However, gold can resort to being a safe haven in times of deep economic uncertainty.
"Gold is being seen increasingly as a source of cash. Liquidation of gold can cover losses elsewhere," said Simon Weeks, head of precious metals at Scotia Mocatta, referring to Friday's slippage in gold with equities. The gold market's attention is on the budget talks between US President Barack Obama and Congressional leaders. As the two sides prepared for the talks on Friday aimed at preventing the US economy from falling back into recession, Democrats and Republicans dug in on their long-held opposing positions.
Gold's safe haven status would shine in the case of failed talks and political paralysis, while success in avoiding the fiscal disaster may dampen sentiment in gold, analysts said. Technical analysis suggested that spot gold could test support at $1,701 an ounce, a break below which will open the way towards $1,672.24, according to Reuters market analyst Wang Tao. Gold has drifted around $1,720 an ounce over the past week or so as support from President Obama's re-election faded and political uncertainty around the fiscal problems kept some investors on the sidelines.
But gold investment demand remains resilient. Holdings of the SPDR Gold Trust GLD, the world's largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, rose to 1,339.616 tonnes by November 15, just a touch off the record high of $1,340.521 tonnes hit in October. Prominent hedge fund manager John Paulson kept a major stake in gold in the third quarter of 2012, a confidence boost to bullion's appeal as a hedge against economic uncertainty, a US regulatory filing showed on Thursday.
China produced 38.5 tonnes of gold in September, bringing total output in the first eight months of the year to 288.2 tonnes, up 11.3 percent from a year ago, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology said on Friday. Platinum group metals prices came under downward pressure after the end of strikes that had swept South Africa's mining sector. Platinum eased 1.34 percent to $1,548.25, while sister metal palladium was last at $623.25, down 0.95 percent. Anglo American Platinum said on Friday production at its South African operations where workers went on an illegal strike will not resume in the coming week because of safety reasons. Silver was down 1.01 percent at $32.26 an ounce.