NEW YORK, May 18: Hedge funds and other big speculators in commodities have started selling gold in a big way, trade data showed on Friday, just a month after they had supported the precious metal amid a record tumble in its price.

Money managers, including hedge funds, pulled $1.4 billion from the US gold futures market for the week ended May 14 by trimming their net long positions in the metal, according to Reuters calculations of data released by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

Just a month ago, CFTC data showed hedge funds had added to their net long positions in the US gold futures despite a record loss in bullion prices at that time due to a broad commodities sell off triggered by global economic worries.

The spot price of gold fell to below $1,340 an ounce in mid-April, losing over eight per cent or more than $125 in a single day. The sell off was mitigated by buying support later in the week from consumers attracted to the drop in prices for gold bars, coins, nuggets and jewellery. Gold futures then shot back up, to above $1,400.

Since then, they’ve fallen again, closing on Friday at below $1,365 an ounce. “I think hedge funds have begun accepting the fact that deflation is a bigger threat to the US economy now than inflation. So, the argument of owning gold as an inflation hedge no longer holds water,” said Adam Sarhan, chief executive at New York-based investment advisory Sarhan Capital.

Open interest, a measure of market liquidity, fell more than three per cent in the week to May 14 for gold contracts traded by money managers on the COMEX division of the New York Mercantile Exchange, the CFTC data showed.

In terms of actual contracts, the net long position held by money managers fell 10,043 to 39,216. Based on COMEX closing prices for May 14, Reuters calculations showed a net outflow of about $1.4bn from the drop. In mid-April, after hedge funds had rushed in to buy gold, open interest for the precious metal on COMEX jumped by a staggering 24 per cent.

On Friday, gold fell for a seventh straight session, its longest losing streak in four years, as the dollar rose to the highest since 2008 after some Federal Reserve officials said the central bank should end its stimulus for the US economy.—Reuters

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