Gold drops 2% as rising yields, dollar, sap appeal; inflation woes linger

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
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May 15 (Reuters) - Gold ​dropped more than 2% on Friday as surging Treasury yields and a stronger U.S. ‌dollar dulled its appeal, with higher oil prices and persistent tensions in the Middle East reinforcing expectations of higher interest rates.

Spot gold was down 2.1% at $4,551.81 per ounce by 1141 GMT, its lowest ​since May 5. Bullion is on track for a weekly loss, down 3.4% so ​far. U.S. gold futures for June delivery lost 2.8% to $4,556.40.

Benchmark 10-year U.S. ⁠Treasury yields rose to a near one-year high, increasing the opportunity cost of holding ​non-yielding gold. The dollar also firmed, making greenback-priced bullion more expensive for overseas buyers.

"Yields and ​the dollar are higher on heightened inflationary concerns, stemming in part from the Gulf hostilities and backed up by the April PPI and CPI numbers released this week," said StoneX analyst Rhona O'Connell.

Brent ​crude oil prices were up 7.8% this week, hovering above $109 a barrel, as the ​Strait of Hormuz remains largely shut.

Higher fuel prices can feed into inflation as manufacturers pass on ‌costs. This, ⁠in turn, forces central banks to keep interest rates elevated, dimming non-yielding gold's appeal.

Inflation data this week has shown consumers and businesses are starting to see big increases in price pressures as a result of the war.

Traders have largely priced out U.S. interest ​rate cuts this year, ​according to CME's ⁠FedWatch Tool. FEDWATCH

"Gold has been wary of the Gulf war for a good while now and the slew of news out of India this ​week with respect to import duties has exacerbated tensions in an already ​weak market," ⁠O'Connell added.

Gold discounts in India jumped to a record this week, triggered by a sharp import duty hike.

"Longer term, the mood is constructive towards higher prices, but arguably in the short ⁠term ​gold is unreadable as uncertainty grips the newswires," said ​independent analyst Ross Norman.

Spot silver fell 6.3% to $78.26 per ounce, platinum lost 3.1% to $1,991.33, and palladium was down 1% at $1,422.41. All ​three were headed for weekly losses.

Reporting by Anjana Anil in Bengaluru; Editing by Shreya Biswas

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