As global stocks enter a bear market, gold is on the verge of bull status.
Global stocks slumped Thursday as investors shunned risk worldwide amid concern that central-bank efforts to support economic growth are losing potency. Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen yesterday told Congress that market turbulence may weigh on the outlook for the economy if it persists. The metal jumped as much as 5.8 percent to $1,263.90 an ounce, the highest since February 2015, and the gain was the biggest intraday advance since 2009.
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Bullion has climbed 18 percent this year, making it the best-performing commodity. The outlook for U.S. interest rates to stay low has boosted gold's appeal because it doesn't pay interest like some other assets. Investors are piling into funds backed my the metal at the fastest pace in seven years. Shares of Barrick Gold Corp., the world's largest producer of the metal, jumped to the highest since September 2014 in Toronto.
"Gold has been relentless, trading through $1,250 and then $1,260 in minutes; Uber drivers will be talking about this rally tonight," Tai Wong, the director of commodity products trading at BMO Capital Markets Corp. in New York, said in an e-mail.