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Gold gains back ground as dollar, yields slip post United States PPI data

Gold prices rebounded on Tuesday, assisted by a pullback in the dollar and Treasury yields after data showed U.S. producer costs increased more than anticipated in April and suggesting inflation remained high.

Spot gold was up 0.7% at $2,351.30 per ounce by 1515 GMT after dropping 1% on Monday. U.S. gold futures increased 0.6% to $2,356.70.

There's excellent assistance for gold still with all the geopolitical tensions ... but the next relocation is going to depend on where we see the U.S. inflation numbers and any clarification on what the Fed will make with rates of interest, stated Chris Gaffney, president of world markets at EverBank.

U.S. manufacturer costs increased more than expected in April amidst strong gains in the costs of items and services, leading traders to pare back bets of a very first rate cut in September.

Gold is viewed as a hedge versus inflation, but greater rates of interest increase the chance cost of holding non-yielding bullion.

The dollar fell 0.2% versus its rivals after an initial jump following the U.S. data, making gold less costly for other currency holders. Standard 10-year Treasury yields likewise crept lower.

On The Other Hand, Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell stated he expects U.S. inflation to continue decreasing through 2024 as it did in 2015 and noted it was not likely the Fed would need to raise rates of interest again.

Focus now shifts to Wednesday's U.S. customer cost figures that might provide more clearness on Fed rate cuts this year.

In other places, area silver rose 1.1% to $28.49 per ounce and palladium acquired 1.9% to $978.75.

Platinum was up 3.1% to $1,028, its greatest level in a year.

We expect platinum to outperform on rising autocatalyst demand, higher potential for investment inflow, and capex tightening in the South Africa PGM mining market which might disproportionately impact platinum supply, Deutsche Bank wrote in a note.

(source: Reuters)