Commodities
Gold eyes break below $1,900 support as Fed fears mount


© Reuters.
Investing.com — Gold prices moved little on Friday, and were nursing steep losses for June as strong U.S. economic data pushed up risk appetite and also fed into concerns over more interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve.
The yellow metal tumbled to three-month lows this week following a string of hawkish signals from Fed officials, most notably Chair Jerome Powell, who reiterated that the bank could hike rates at least two more times this year.
A sharp upward revision in U.S. also showed that the world’s largest economy was more resilient than expected, denting gold’s safe haven appeal. It also pushed up concerns that the Fed will have enough economic headroom to keep raising rates – a scenario that also heralds more pressure on gold.
was flat at $1,908.01 an ounce, while fell 0.1% to $1,915.95 an ounce by 21:59 ET (01:59 GMT). Both contracts were down 2.7% and 3.3% in June, respectively.
Gold eyes break below $1,900
The yellow metal was now eyeing a sustained drop below the key $1,900 support level – an event that analysts say could trigger some technical selling.
Spot gold had fallen as far as $1,891 on Thursday before recouping some losses, but remained close to making a more concrete foray into the $1,800s. Gold futures had just avoided a drop below $1,900 on Thursday.
Strength in the – which hit a two-week high after the positive GDP data and Powell’s comments – also pressured bullion prices.
The prospect of rising interest rates bodes poorly for gold, given that it increases the opportunity cost of buying the yellow metal over the dollar and government debt. This notion battered gold through 2022, and has also weighed on the metal in 2023.
In addition to the Fed, hawkish signals from the European Central Bank and the Bank of England also pressured the yellow metal this week, especially as inflation in the two countries remained high.
Copper rises past weak China PMIs
Copper prices advanced on Friday, even as data pointed to more economic pain for China, the world’s largest copper importer.
rose 0.4% to $3.7127 a pound, but were headed for a 2.7% loss this week. Still, futures were up nearly 2% for June, having recovered from six-month lows hit through May.
China’s contracted through June, while growth in the slowed as an economic rebound in the country failed to pick up.
While weakness in China heralds softer copper demand in the country, the trend could also invite more stimulus measures from Beijing to support economic growth.
Commodities
Oil prices rise; U.S. crude inventories plunge, Russia-Ukraine truce eyed
Commodities
India’s Reliance to stop buying Venezuelan oil over US tariffs, sources say
Commodities
Oil prices climb on Venezuela supply worries
   Forex3 years ago Forex3 years ago- Forex Today: the dollar is gaining strength amid gloomy sentiment at the start of the Fed’s week 
   Forex3 years ago Forex3 years ago- Unbiased review of Pocket Option broker 
   Forex3 years ago Forex3 years ago- Dollar to pound sterling exchange rate today: Pound plummeted to its lowest since 1985 
   Forex3 years ago Forex3 years ago- How is the Australian dollar doing today? 
   Cryptocurrency3 years ago Cryptocurrency3 years ago- What happened in the crypto market – current events today 
   World3 years ago World3 years ago- Why are modern video games an art form? 
   Commodities3 years ago Commodities3 years ago- Copper continues to fall in price on expectations of lower demand in China 
   Economy3 years ago Economy3 years ago- Crude oil tankers double in price due to EU anti-Russian sanctions 






 
										
 
										
 
										
 
										
 
										
 
										
 
										
 
										
