Latest News

Gold hovers near record high with focus on US data, Fed minutes

Gold costs rose on Tuesday, hovering near a record peak hit in the previous session, supported by company reserve bank purchasing, while investors viewed out for the Federal Reserve's policy conference minutes and U.S. inflation information for fresh signals.

Spot gold was up 0.3% at $2,345.09 per ounce, as of 0621 GMT, after hitting a record high of $2,353.79 on Monday. U.S. gold futures got 0.5% to $2,363.50.

Gold has actually been the 'asset of choice' in financial markets, with an undercurrent of reserve bank buying and speculative flows sending the rate to greater highs on a regular basis, said Tim Waterer, chief market expert at KCM Trade.

The minutes of the Fed's March policy meeting and the U.S. Consumer Rate Index (CPI) information are due on Wednesday. The Fed held rate of interest constant at 5.25% -5.50% variety in March.

After a strong U.S. jobs report last Friday, the marketplace pared expectations for the variety of rate cuts this year to 2, from three to 4 a couple of weeks ago, according to LSEG's rate likelihood app.

Greater rates of interest reduce the appeal of holding non-yielding gold.

Inflation data today postures a danger if the readings come out on the hotter side of the journal. However gold has been immune today from increasing bond yields, which might be a bullish signal for gold in the medium term, Waterer said.

Spot silver increased 0.2% to $27.90 per ounce, after hitting its greatest levels considering that June 2021 earlier in the session.

We are seeing there is a bit of rotation back into the silver market given short-term speculators are now hypothesizing silver rates to in fact play this catch up considered that gold has exceeded silver in the last one month or two, stated Kelvin Wong, a senior market expert for Asia Pacific at OANDA.

Platinum got 1.8% to $975.60 and palladium increased 1.3% to $1,055.14.

(source: Reuters)