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Gold prices hold steady as US Fed rate cuts bets are reinforced by data

Gold prices hold steady as US Fed rate cuts bets are reinforced by data
Gold prices hold steady as US Fed rate cuts bets are reinforced by data

The gold price remained largely unchanged on Tuesday as traders expected the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates by December due to weaker-than-expected retail sales in the United States. By 09:36 am, spot gold was down 0.2% at $4,130.85 an ounce. ET (1436 GMT). The prices rose by nearly 2% after some Fed policymakers indicated support for the third rate cut of this year. Prices had reached their highest levels since November 14 earlier in the day. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery rose by 0.8% to $4127.40 an ounce.

Peter Grant, senior metals analyst at Zaner Metals, said that recent Fed dovishness has revived hopes for a rate cut in December. This (data) does not seem to change this.

The retail sales in September were lower than expected, following a period of rapid growth.

Data showed that the U.S. Producer Price Index increased by 2.7% for the 12-month period ending in September after increasing by the same margin during August. The 43-day government shutdown delayed the report. CME data shows that the markets are pricing an 85% probability of a rate cut in December - up from 30% last week – and a 64% chance of one in January. Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran stated on Tuesday that the deteriorating state of the job market requires further rate cuts. This is in line with remarks made by Fed Governor Christopher Waller, who was dovish on Monday.

Gold that does not yield tends to perform well when interest rates are low and there is geopolitical or economic instability.

ActivTrades analyst Ricardo Evangelista stated that "economic uncertainty, geopolitical turbulence, and dovish Fed expectation continue to support the gold price (in near-term)". Silver spot rose by 0.1%, to $51.41 an ounce. Platinum rose by 0.3%, to $1.548.80, and palladium fell 0.2%, to $1.392.79. (Reporting from Pablo Sinha, Bengaluru. Additional reporting by Sherin E. Varghese. Editing by Louise Heavens.)

(source: Reuters)