Metals Stocks: Gold edges higher as Treasury yields pull back from 3-year highs

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Gold futures were slightly higher Thursday, finding support as Treasury yields pulled back.

Gold for June delivery
GC00,
+0.61%

GCM22,
+0.61%

rose $8.30, or 0.4%, to $1,931.40 an ounce on Comex, while May silver
SIK22,
+0.58%

was up 6.7 cents, or 0.3%, to $24.525 an ounce.

Gold ended lower in Wednesday’s session, then saw volatile electronic trading after minutes from the Federal Reserve’s March meeting, moving higher, then lower as the minutes offered insight into the central bank’s plans to shrink its balance sheet and affirmed that policy makers are prepared to hike rates in outsize half-percentage-point increments in their effort to rein in inflation.

Gold suffered as long-dated Treasurys sold off, pushing the yield on the 10-year note to its highest since March 2019. Higher yields on government debt and other bonds raises the opportunity cost of holding nonyielding assets like gold.

Overall, gold has held up well despite a backup in yields so far this year, analysts said. The yellow metal remains up 5.6% in the year to date, with support tied in part to demand for haven assets sparked by Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, as well as concerns about the war’s ability to drive up already surging inflation. Gold is seen as a hedge against inflation.

The rising trend in yields hint that the medium-term direction gold “should be the south, and we could see the price of an ounce sink sustainably to $1800/1820 area, which includes the 200-day moving average,” said Ipek Ozkardeskaya, senior analyst at Swissquote, in emailed comments.

“What keeps gold prices sustained right now is the fact that Russia is one of the largest gold miners, and that the safe haven demand remains tight, as the geopolitical tensions remain relatively high,” the analyst wrote.

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