Gold prices hit two-week highs on Monday, climbing more than 1% on renewed buying of the metal by China's central bank following a six-month hiatus, with bullishness increased by anticipation of a U.S. Federal Reserve interest rate cut next week. Spot gold gained 1.1% to $2,662.98 per ounce, as of 01:41 p.m. ET (1841 GMT). U.S. gold futures settled 1% higher at $2,685.50. The resumption of Chinese buying may support investor demand in the country. In 2023, China was the world's largest official sector buyer of gold, but the PBOC paused its 18-month buying streak in May. Spot silver added...
Oil prices climbed more than 1.5% on Monday on higher geopolitical risk after the fall of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, and as top importer China flagged its first move towards a loosened monetary policy stance since 2010. Brent crude futures were up $1.17, or 1.7%, to $72.30 per barrel at 12:50 p.m. ET (1451 GMT). U.S. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures were up $1.34, or 2%, to $68.55. China's slowdown was a factor behind the decision of oil producers' group OPEC+ last week to postpone its plans for higher output until April. Weighing on prices, leading exporter Saudi Aramco...
The key issue is whether Governor Michele Bullock heeds market assessments that last week's unexpectedly weak third-quarter GDP is a game-changer for the economic and inflation outlook The data showed Australia's economy grew at its slowest pace since 1991 — excluding the exogenous shock of the Covid pandemic. And it confirmed that GDP growth is slowing much more than the 2012-13 slump — which came just after the RBA last started an easing cycle. The RBA is widely expected to leave policy unchanged on Tuesday. However, the GDP figures prompted OIS traders to view February as a coin toss...