Latest News

Gold holds ground on US Fed rate-cut hopes, lower yields

Gold prices held stable on Friday after a sharp increase in the previous session, buoyed by a dip in U.S. Treasury yields, as financiers grew positive the Federal Reserve will decrease rates of interest in September.

Spot gold was down 0.1% to $2,422.99 per ounce as of 1351 GMT, after a 1.9% rise on Thursday. U.S. gold futures held consistent at $2,462.

However, the bullion was down about 0.8% up until now today, on track for its biggest weekly decrease given that June 7. Rates fell as much as 3% on Monday after investors liquidated positions in tandem with a wider equities sell-off.

In the medium term, the outlook for gold stays favorable, with any dips likely to be temporary due to underlying macroeconomic factors, stated Zain Vawda, market analyst at MarketPulse by OANDA.

The other day's U.S. jobless claims information eased economic crisis issues, improving gold costs. Furthermore, comments from the Fed this week have actually supported the idea that rate cuts might be upcoming.

The dollar was down 0.1% versus its competitors, making gold more attractive for other currency holders, while the Benchmark 10-year note yields slipped.

Fed's policymakers are progressively confident that inflation is cooling enough to allow interest-rate cuts ahead, and they will take their cues on the size and timing of those rate cuts not from stock-market turmoil but from the financial data.

Financier focus shifts to the U.S. customer rate index (CPI). due next week for additional insights into the Fed's policy course.

We preserve a favorable view on gold as a diversifier hedge. versus chaos somewhere else, said Ole Hansen, head of commodity. strategy at Saxo Bank in a note.

If the Federal Reserve begins cutting rates, potentially as. early as next month, interest rate-sensitive financiers may. go back to gold through ETFs.

Spot silver was down 0.9% to $27.29 per ounce and. platinum fell 0.9% to $922.05. Both metals were poised. for weekly losses.

Palladium fell 1.3% to $910.25, but was set for a. weekly gain.

(source: Reuters)