Metals Stocks: Gold prices trade at a more than 2-week high as Russia-Ukraine war enters second month

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Gold futures rose Thursday, trading at their highest level in more than two weeks, as investors monitored developments around Russia’s invasion of Ukraine and hawkish remarks by Federal Reserve officials.

Prices for the metal are solidly higher as “marketplace risk aversion remains overall elevated amid the Russia-Ukraine war and its many implications for the world,” said Jim Wyckoff, senior analyst at Kitco.com, in a daily note.

Gold for April delivery
GC00,
+0.76%

GCJ22,
+0.76%

rose $13.90, or 0.7%, to $1,951.20 an ounce on Comex, after trading as high as $1,968.60 — at the highest most-active contract price levels since March 14, FactSet data show. May silver
SIK22,
+2.60%

was up 63.6 cents, or 2.5%, at $25.825 an ounce, poised for its highest finish since March 11.

President Joe Biden met Thursday with leaders of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization, the first of a series of meetings with European allies and other world leaders in response to Russia’s Feb. 24 invasion of Ukraine. Biden and U.S. allies are expected to roll out further rounds of sanctions against Moscow.

“The brutal reality of war in Ukraine continues on the ground but a sense of it getting closer to de-escalation, even if only temporarily, has been rising in the markets” said Ricardo Evangelista, senior analyst at ActivTrades, in a note.

“As the safe-haven trade that propelled the price of the precious metal to above $2,000 per ounce earlier in the month eases, traders’ expectations over what the Fed will do over the next few months comes once again under the spotlight,” he said.

Fed officials this week have signaled they’re prepared to raise rates even more quickly than previously expected. Fed Chairman Jerome Powell on Monday said the Fed could move rates up by more than a quarter point at future meetings if deemed necessary. Other Fed officials have echoed Powell, pushing up expectations for a half-point increase at the next policy meeting in May.

“The latest signs emanating from the U.S. central bank point at a strong determination to bring inflation under control, with interest rates likely to rise quickly; a scenario that, in the absence of fresh geopolitical concerns, will be likely to weigh on gold prices,” Evangelista said.

In other metals trading, May copper
HGK22,
+0.43%

added 0.4% to $4.798 a pound. April platinum
PLJ22,
+0.79%

rose 0.4% to $1,026.60 an ounce, while June palladium
PAM22,
-0.21%

traded at $2,505.50 an ounce, down 0.5%.

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