Gold fell to its lowest level in a week on Monday as investors sought safety in the US dollar on concerns about a selloff in global stocks worsened by worries over economic growth in China. Spot gold dipped 1.4 percent to $1,185.81 an ounce by 1355 p.m. EDT (1755 GMT), on track for its biggest one-day percentage loss since Aug. 15. The yellow metal earlier touched its lowest since Sept. 28 at $1,183.19.
US gold futures for December settled down $17, or 1.41 percent, at $1,188.6. "We are seeing some strength in the dollar index and some weakness in the equity market and it doesn't appear that investors are going for safety in the gold markets at all," said Phil Streible, senior commodities strategist at RJO Futures in Chicago.
"So they might be looking at Treasuries or other interest bearing products." Investor concern over higher US interest rates, growth concerns in China due to the trade dispute with the United States, emerging market weakness and an Italian budget row all combined to send equities sharply into the red.
The nervous mood was aggravated by China's central bank on Sunday cutting the level of cash that banks must hold as reserves, aimed at lowering financing costs. Despite the losses, gold has held in a $34 range for the last 1-1/2 months, which some analysts say suggests resilience.
Worries over the damage to emerging market economies from higher US interest rates has spurred safe-haven bidding. "Weakness in emerging markets might bring in small bids for gold," said Nicholas Cawley, an analyst at DailyFX.com, adding that the "overriding factor is higher US interest rates and bond yields."
Meanwhile, speculators cut their net short position in COMEX gold by 4,186 contracts to 73,128 in the week to Oct. 2. Spot silver fell 2 percent to $14.30 and platinum slipped 1.1 percent to $812 an ounce. Palladium was up 0.4 percent at $1,073.35.