Business World

Gold hits over 9-month high on dovish views of US Fed chief

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GOLD PRICES rebounded sharply on Wednesday as the US Federal Reserve chief’s surprising­ly dovish remarks on the central bank’s fight to bring down inflation sank the dollar and signaled to investors that a peak in interest rates was likely approachin­g.

Spot gold climbed 1.2% to $1,951.43 per ounce by 3:48 p.m. ET (2048 GMT), its highest since mid-April 2022. US gold futures settled 0.1% lower at $1,942.80.

Calling Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s press conference ‘relatively dovish’, Standard Chartered analyst Suki Cooper said “signaling the path to peak rates and highlighti­ng falling inflation has given gold prices a boost as the US dollar weakened and real rates eased.”

“We maintain our view for the Fed to pause before cutting rates in H2-23. Gold has found tremendous support from central bank additions and gold investor positionin­g is elevated for this stage of a hiking cycle, suggesting that many of the macro tailwinds have been priced in and prices are likely to peak in Q1-23.”

The Fed raised its target interest rate by a quarter of a percentage point on Wednesday, yet continued to promise “ongoing increases” in borrowing costs as part of its still unresolved battle against inflation.

“Powell’s given a bullish market a license to rally,” said Tai Wong, a senior trader at Heraeus Precious Metals in New York. “If the intention was to provide a hawkish 25-bps hike this was an inadequate performanc­e.”

Greenback-priced gold is highly sensitive to rising US interest rates, which raise the opportunit­y cost of holding non-yielding bullion, and vice versa.

Spot silver rose 1.3% to $24.01 per ounce; while platinum dipped 0.4% to $1,007.63; and palladium gained 1.7% to $1,676.72. —

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