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Silver nears record high as gold falls on dollar firmness ahead of US inflation data

Silver nears record high as gold falls on dollar firmness ahead of US inflation data
Silver nears record high as gold falls on dollar firmness ahead of US inflation data

Silver hovered at record highs, as gold prices fell on Thursday. The dollar strengthened, and investors were 'cautious' ahead of U.S. inflation figures that could influence the Federal Reserve policy.

As of 1210 GMT, spot gold was down 0.4% at $4,323.57 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures fell 0.4% as well to $4,356.10.

Dollar index increased after reaching a near-one-week-high on Wednesday. This made greenback-priced gold more expensive for foreign buyers.

Spot silver dropped 0.1% to $66.19 per ounce after reaching a record high at $66.88 the previous session.

The slightly stronger dollar is a headwind to both gold and silver )... Some cautious investors prefer to be on the safer side and avoid 'running into the inflation report with an opened position,' said UBS analyst Gian?Staunovo.

White metal has, however, increased 129% this year due to a stronger industrial demand as well as a continuing supply deficit. Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that the next Fed chair will be someone with a "significant" belief in lower interest rates. Trump will announce his choice to replace current Fed chair Jerome Powell early next year.

Fed Governor Christopher Waller said that the Fed still has the ability to "cut interest rates" in light of the deteriorating job market. Data released earlier this week showed that the U.S. unemployment rate increased to 4.6% in the month of November. This was higher than the poll-predicted 4.4%, and the highest level since September 2021. Investors await the release of the November U.S. consumer price index later that day. A survey projects a 3.1% increase year-on-year.

The markets are already pricing in two more 25-basis point rate cuts for next year.

Gold and other non-yielding investments benefit from a low-interest rate environment.

Palladium rose 2.8% to $1,693.55, which is a record high for nearly three years. Platinum rose 1.3%, to $1,924.05, an all-time high.

(source: Reuters)