PRECIOUS-Gold slips off 7-week peak as U.S. yields gain

  • 4/19/2021
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(Updates prices) * Dollar index hits six-week low * Palladium jumps to over 1-year high * Citi raises palladium 0-3 month forecast to $3,200/oz April 19 (Reuters) - Gold retreated from a more than seven-week peak on Monday as U.S. Treasury yields gained, weighing on non-yielding bullion’s appeal and countering support from a weaker dollar. Spot gold was down 0.3% at $1,770.97 per ounce by 1:41 p.m. EDT (1741 GMT) after touching $1,789.77, the highest since Feb. 25. U.S. gold futures settled down 0.5% at $1,770.60. “We’re still probably going to see a gradual rise in U.S. interest rates along with gradual steepening of the yield curve, and that should take some steam out of gold,” said TD Securities commodity strategist Daniel Ghali. The benchmark 10-year yield rose above 1.6% after hitting a multi-week low last week. Bullion has shed more than 6% so far this year, mostly pressured by surging U.S. yields. But capping gold’s declines was a weaker dollar, which slid to a more than six-week low against rivals. “The physical market has also provided good support, cushioning prices on dips below $1,700/oz,” said Standard Chartered analyst Suki Cooper. “Demand in India and China has bounced back from low levels and central banks swung to net buying in February.” China, the world’s biggest gold consumer, has given domestic and international banks permission to import large amounts of gold into the country, five sources familiar with the matter said. Among other precious metals, silver fell 0.6 % to $25.80 per ounce. Platinum inched 0.1% higher to $1,204.00. Palladium climbed 1.5% to $2,819.21 per ounce, after rising to $2,845.50, the highest since February 2020. “Palladium is set to continue to move higher owing to a recovery in automotive output, the increasing probability of rhodium to palladium substitution, and ongoing supply disruptions,” Citi Research said in a note. It raised its 0-3 month point price forecast to $3,200 per ounce from $3,000. (Reporting by Eileen Soreng, Arpan Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Oatis, Richard Chang and Jan Harvey)

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