
Investing.com-- Gold prices moved little on Thursday, coming under pressure from strength in the dollar and Treasury yields as signs of sticky inflation pushed up concerns that the Federal Reserve will maintain its hawkish rhetoric.
Data also showed some resilience in the U.S. economy, further sapping safe haven demand for the yellow metal amid growing bets that the country will avoid a recession this year.
But U.S. interest rates remained a key point of concern for gold markets, with a string of Federal Reserve speakers due before an interest rate decision later in the month.
Spot gold rose 0.1% to $1,919.32 an ounce, while gold futures expiring in December fell 0.1% to $1,943.30 an ounce by 00:58 ET (04:58 GMT). Both instruments were trading just above their lowest level in 10 days.
Data on Wednesday showed that U.S. service sector activity grew more than expected in August. But a particular point of contention for markets was data showing an uptick in service sector prices, which is likely to factor into stickier inflation readings in the coming months.
The reading, coupled with a recent spike in oil prices, fueled renewed concerns that U.S. inflation will remain sticky this year, eliciting a hawkish response from the Federal Reserve.
The Fed is widely expected to keep rates on hold in September. But the central bank is also set to keep rates higher for longer.
The prospect of higher rates bodes poorly for gold, given that they push up the opportunity cost of investing in bullion. A stronger dollar also diminishes the per-ounce value of the yellow metal.
This notion had battered gold over the past year, and presents a cloudy outlook for the yellow metal.
Among industrial metals, copper prices fell on Thursday as Chinese trade data pointed to continued economic weakness in the world’s largest copper importer.
Copper futures fell 0.4% to $3.7757 a pound- a two-week low.
Chinese data showed that while imports and exports shrank at a slower-than-expected pace in August, they still remained close to historic lows. China’s copper imports also dropped about 5% from last year, indicating sluggish appetite for the red metal amid deteriorating economic conditions.
China’s copper imports have slowed in recent months as the country grapples with a manufacturing slowdown, as well as a severe cash crunch in its massive property market.
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