Gold prices rebound from 2-1/2-year low
Gold prices rebounded from a 2-1/2-year low as a slight pause in the dollar rally helped restore greenback-priced bullion’s allure, although risks from looming rate hikes persisted, Reuters reported.
Spot gold was 0.5% higher at $1,629.69 per ounce by 1:46 p.m. EDT (1746 GMT), after climbing over 1% to $1,642.29 earlier in the session.
US gold futures settled up 0.2% at $1,636.20.
“Today is just a little bit of a recovery after some of the extreme weakness seen over recent days … but I don’t think there’s really any fundamental change taking place in the gold market,” said Ryan McKay, commodity strategist at TD Securities.
The dollar had retreated from two-decade highs, prompting investors to turn to gold, which had fallen to its lowest since April 2020 at $1,620.20 in the previous session. A weaker dollar makes gold attractive for overseas buyers.
Gold prices also benefited from “corrective price rebounds from recent selling pressure and on short covering from the shorter-term futures traders,” Jim Wyckoff, senior analyst at Kitco Metals, said in a note.
However, gold faces pressure from aggressive interest rate hikes that tend to raise the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion.
The US central bank will need to raise rates by at least another percentage point this year, Chicago Fed President Charles Evans said.
“We’re still essentially in a pretty weak environment for gold with an aggressive Fed and some Fed speakers throughout the week likely to hammer home the point that rates are going to be higher for longer,” McKay added.
“We could see prices fall below the $1,600 level.”