Gold edges lower as investors cautiously eye Fed meeting

27 Jul, 2021

LONDON/AMSTERDAM: Gold edged lower on Monday despite a weaker dollar, as investors turned cautious in the run-up to a Federal Reserve policy meeting.

Spot gold was down 0.2% to $1,798.64 per ounce by 12:54 p.m. EDT, while US gold futures also fell 0.2% to $1,798.80.

The US central bank will begin a two-day policy meeting on Tuesday.

“The concern now is that we will get the first hints of not necessarily a rate increase but what kind of reductions the Fed envisions to its balance sheet, and that could be a trigger for rates to move higher,” said Edward Meir, analyst with ED&F Man Capital Markets.

Meir, however, said that was unlikely to drive a sustained fall in gold prices, with the metal drawing support from a dovish European Central Bank, a currently accommodative Fed, large fiscal stimulus and higher inflation.

Both the ECB and Fed have suggested they will keep monetary policy accommodative for some time.

But Han Tan, market analyst at Exinity Group, said that if the policy-setting Federal Open Market Committee provides more details about tapering plans, gold could test the June lows of around $1,750-$1,770.

The precious metal also came under pressure despite a weaker dollar and a slight dip in benchmark US Treasury yields.

Elsewhere, silver rose 0.3% to $25.23 an ounce.

“You might have to wait for a bit for a breakout in silver, said Phillip Streible, chief market strategist at Blue Line Futures in Chicago. “Silver relies a lot on infrastructure and the slowdown in China might impact the technology that silver demands in order to be consumed.”

Floods in central China, especially in the industrial and transport hub city of Zhengzhou, have raised concerns over damage to the region’s infrastructure.

Among other metals, platinum gained 0.6% to $1,067.41 an ounce and palladium was steady at $2,673.66.

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