
Gold prices weakened on Thursday (September 11th) after hitting a new record earlier this week. Selling pressure emerged as the US dollar strengthened and bond yields rose, reducing the precious metal's appeal as a hedge. Investors tended to take profits ahead of the release of US consumer inflation data, which could determine the direction of the Fed's interest rate policy. Despite the correction, the medium-term outlook for gold remains relatively positive, especially if the US central bank signals a more aggressive interest rate cut at its upcoming meeting. Global geopolitical...
Silver remains high at $41/oz after US data (benign CPI, rising jobless claims) strengthened the case for a 25 bps Fed rate cut next week—weakening the dollar and supporting the precious metal. The industrial demand environment (particularly PV/electrification) maintains a positive bias.Technically, the $41 area provides initial support; a break above $42 opens the door to $42.50. Failure to hold could lead to a correction to $40.50–$40.00 before buying interest resurfaces. (ads)The silver price at the time of writing was $41,431/Toz.DISCLAIMERNote: This article is for analytical purposes...
Gold prices continue to approach $3,650 per ounce and are poised for a fourth weekly gain. This was fueled by expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut US interest rates, as inflows into gold-backed ETFs increased. Silver also rallied, reaching $42 per ounce—its highest level since 2011. Market sentiment was supported by US consumer inflation data for August that met expectations, giving the Fed room to lower borrowing costs after previous labor market data showed weakness. Market participants now expect at least one 25 basis point interest rate cut at next week's Fed meeting, with the...