
Gold (XAU/USD) prices maintained their negative bias through the first half of the European session on Friday (17/1), albeit lacked any follow-through selling and remained near one-month highs touched the previous day. The US Dollar (USD) regained some positive traction and for now, seems to have snapped three consecutive days of losing streak amid growing acceptance that the Federal Reserve (Fed) will pause its interest rate-cutting cycle later this month. This, along with a generally positive tone around the equity markets, turned out to be key factors undermining the precious...
Gold prices traded flat in the mid-day U.S. session on Friday, holding near a one-month high and on track for a third weekly gain. Recent U.S. economic data, including cooler-than-expected core inflation and disappointing retail sales figures, have reignited hopes that the Federal Reserve could cut interest rates more than once this year. In addition, the potential for tariffs under the incoming Donald Trump administration, which could further fuel inflation, has also strengthened gold's position as an inflation hedge. On the geopolitical front, a ceasefire and hostage release agreement...
Gold prices fell in early Asian trading on Monday, extending the previous session's decline as a stronger US dollar weighed on the bullion metal and markets awaited the inauguration of US President Donald Trump. However, gold last week posted a weekly gain of 0.5%, its third straight weekly gain. Concerns surrounding tariffs in the global economic landscape, along with potentially stubborn inflation and geopolitical uncertainty, will spur capital flows into gold as a safe haven asset. Source: Newsmaker.id