Gold lingers near 7-month low on firm Treasury yields, rate hike bets

Kitco Media
By Reuters
Published:
Updated:
Reuters
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July 1 (Reuters) - Gold steadied on ​Wednesday, but hovered near a seven-month low hit in the previous session ‌as rising U.S. Treasury yields and growing bets that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates pressured prices.

Spot gold was little changed at $4,010.11 per ounce as of 1109 GMT, after ​touching its lowest level since last November of $3,942.99 in the previous session. ​U.S. gold futures for August delivery lost 0.4% to $4,023.80/oz.

On Tuesday, the yellow metal ⁠recorded its first quarterly loss since 2024.

U.S. Treasury yields rose for a third ​straight session. A stronger U.S. dollar also added pressure by making bullion less affordable for overseas ​buyers.

"The weakness is a bit driven by comments from Fed's Hammack, suggesting a rate hike might be needed and market participants pricing in a bit more rate hikes for this year," ​said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.

Federal Reserve Bank of Cleveland President Beth Hammack said on ​Tuesday she may advocate for higher rates if inflation pressures don't moderate.

Expectations for more hikes are not helping investment demand, and ETF holdings have seen renewed outflows in recent days, said Staunovo, noting that price volatility is expected around economic data releases this week.

June ​ADP employment data, due ​at 1215 GMT, ⁠and Thursday's nonfarm payrolls report could give further clues on the Fed's policy path.

Markets will also closely watch the European ​Central Bank's annual Sintra conference on Wednesday, where Fed Chair ​Kevin Warsh ⁠and ECB President Christine Lagarde will speak.

On the geopolitical front, concerns persisted over the prospects for U.S.-Iran diplomacy after Tehran said it would not meet senior U.S. envoys who travelled ⁠to ​the region following the recent outbreak of hostilities.

Spot ​silver fell 0.4% to $58.33 per ounce.

Platinum rose 0.4% to $1,556.95, after hitting its lowest since November. Palladium slid 1.4% to $1,187.50.

Reporting by ​Sumit Saha and Noel John in Bengaluru; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair and Diti Pujara

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