
Investing.com -- Gold prices rose slightly on Monday, steadying after steep losses over the past four weeks as markets awaited more cues on U.S. monetary policy, while copper prices were flat after a Chinese interest rate cut missed expectations.
Focus this week is largely on the Jackson Hole Symposium on Thursday and Friday, where Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell is expected to offer more signals on the path of U.S. interest rates.
Gold prices somewhat trimmed recent losses after tumbling below the key $1,900 an ounce level, seeing some safe haven demand as slowing growth in China also weighed on sentiment. The People’s Bank of China largely missed market expectations with changes to its loan prime rate (LPR) on Monday.
Spot gold rose 0.2% to $1,892.68 an ounce, while gold futures expiring in December rose 0.3% to $1,921.95 an ounce by 00:16 ET (04:16 GMT). Both instruments were still trading close to a five-month low.
Gold is expected to trade rangebound in the coming days as investors hunker down ahead of the Jackson Hole Symposium later this week.
Strong U.S. inflation and labor market readings had severely dented gold prices in recent weeks, as markets began pricing in a greater possibility of higher interest rates. Powell is now expected to shed more light on the bank’s plans for rates, after the minutes of the Fed’s July meeting showed that most policymakers supported higher rates to curb sticky inflation.
The dollar and treasury yields advanced on expectations of higher rates, which in turn dented gold and other non-yielding assets. Rising interest rates had ramped up the opportunity cost of holding gold over the past year, leaving most traders sticking to the dollar as their preferred safe haven.
Among industrial metals, copper prices moved little on Monday even as top importer China disappointed markets with its rate cut.
Copper futures were flat at $3.7207 a pound.
The PBOC cut its one-year LPR by 10 basis points (bps) to 3.45%, while the 5-year LPR was left unchanged at 4.20%. Analysts had forecast a cut of at least 15 bps to each rate.
The move signaled that the world’s largest copper importer has little monetary headroom to keep loosening policy and supporting growth - a trend that could potentially worsen its appetite for the red metal.
Copper imports to China had fallen sharply in July, as a post-COVID economic recovery in the country ran dry. This weighed heavily on copper prices over the past three weeks.
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