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Silver reaches new highs; gold falls after Fed split vote on rate cuts

Silver reaches new highs; gold falls after Fed split vote on rate cuts
Silver reaches new highs; gold falls after Fed split vote on rate cuts

Gold edged lower on Thursday, as traders weighed ?the U.S. Federal Reserve's divided vote on a quarter-percentage-point ?interest ?rate cut, while silver climbed to yet another record high.

As of 1248 GMT, spot gold dropped 0.3% to $4216.49 an ounce. U.S. Gold Futures for February Delivery gained 0.5%, to $4244.40 an ounce.

Ross Norman, an independent analyst, said that the fundamentals of gold remained unchanged.

The Fed cut rates by a quarter percentage point in a rare, divided vote on Wednesday. However, officials signaled a pause before further easing. They are assessing the future direction of the job market as well as inflation which "remains slightly elevated."

Gold and other non-yielding investments are typically benefitted by lower interest rates.

The projections released after the two-day conference showed that most policymakers only see one rate reduction in 2026. Fed Chair Jerome Powell did not give any indication as to when a second rate cut could occur.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that on Wednesday the Fed could have cut rates even more. Trump will announce the new Fed Chair early next year. White House Economic Advisor Kevin Hassett is seen as the frontrunner.

Investors will be watching for the non-farm payrolls data and unemployment rate figures due on 16th December to get more clues about what next moves the Fed is likely to make.

Spot silver increased 0.6% to $62.16 an ounce after hitting a new record high at $62.88 in the previous session. This brings its year-to date gain to 115% due to strong industrial demand, declining stocks and its inclusion on the U.S. Critical Minerals list.

Silver's fundamentals are still incredibly strong. The critical minerals list is a huge tailwind, and there's a possibility we could see some stockbuilding. This would increase the market's tightness. Norman said.

Palladium dropped 0.9%, to $1.463.97, and platinum rose 0.5%, to $1.665.99. (Reporting and editing by Kate Mayberry, Shalesh Kuber and Pablo Sinha from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)