Investing.com-- Gold prices steadied in Asian trade on Thursday, and were nursing three days of losses as hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve boosted the dollar and heralded more pain for the yellow metal.
Spot gold slid below the key $1,900 an ounce level this week, and was trading at its lowest level in five months amid pressure from a spike in the dollar and Treasury yields.
The yellow metal saw little safe haven demand despite increasing concerns over a Chinese economic slowdown, with the prospect of higher yields keeping traders positioned largely in the dollar.
Spot gold steadied at $1,892.62 an ounce- its weakest level in five months, while gold futures fell 0.3% to $1,921.95 an ounce- a five-week low, by 00:05 ET (04:05 GMT).
The minutes of the Fed’s July meeting showed on Wednesday that most members of the rate-setting committee supported higher interest rates to curb sticky inflation.
While officials were divided over the need for more hikes, they still posited more upside risks to inflation- a scenario that could eventually attract more rate increases by the central bank. U.S. inflation also read higher for July.
The dollar shot up to a near two-month high after the minutes, while benchmark 10-year Treasury yields reached their highest levels in nearly 10 months. Yields were also close to reaching levels last seen during the 2008 financial crisis.
The prospect of higher U.S. interest rates bodes poorly for gold, given that it increases the opportunity cost of investing in non-yielding assets. This notion had battered the yellow metal through 2022, and is expected to keep weighing on gold until the Fed decides to begin trimming rates.
But analysts expect the Fed to keep rates high for at least the
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