GOLD prices held steady on Thursday (Jun 27) after falling to a two-week low in the previous session as the US dollar and Treasury yields held firm ahead of a key inflation reading due later this week.
Spot gold was unchanged at US$2,298.88 per ounce, as at 0127 GMT. Bullion was at its lowest since Jun 10 on Wednesday. US gold futures were down 0.2 per cent at US$2,309.60.
The US dollar hovered near a roughly two-month high, making gold more expensive for other currency holders, while benchmark 10-year yields also edged higher.
This week, traders are looking forward to the US first-quarter gross domestic product estimates due on Thursday and the personal consumption expenditures price index report on Friday to get more cues on the timing and scale of possible rate cuts this year.
Sales of new US single-family homes dropped to a six-month low in May as a jump in mortgage rates weighed on demand, offering more evidence that the housing market recovery was faltering.
US Federal Reserve governor Michelle Bowman on Wednesday reiterated her baseline view that “inflation will decline further with the policy rate held steady”, and that rate cuts will “eventually” be appropriate if inflation does move sustainably towards 2 per cent.
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Federal Reserve governor Lisa Cook said on Tuesday the US central bank is on track for a rate cut if the economy’s performance meets her expectations, but she declined to say when the Fed will be able to act.
Lower interest rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion.
Spot gold may keep falling into a range of US$2,275 to $2,286 per ounce, as it is riding on a steady downtrend.
Elsewhere, the European Central Bank (ECB) could gradually reduce interest rates if inflation falls as expected, two ECB policymakers said on Wednesday.
Spot silver rose 0.1 per cent to US$28.78 per ounce, platinum was up 0.1 per cent to US$1,011.65 and palladium lost 0.6 per cent to US$922.94. REUTERS