Investing.com-- Gold prices fell in Asian trade on Tuesday, extending overnight losses as easing concerns over geopolitical tensions in the Middle East sapped the yellow metal of safe haven demand.
This trade also left gold more vulnerable to recent strength in the dollar, while the prospect of higher-for-longer U.S. interest rates presented more price pressures for bullion.
Spot gold slid 0.9% to $2,305.14 an ounce, while gold futures expiring in June fell 1.1% to $2,319.70 an ounce by 00:45 ET (04:45 GMT). Spot prices were now trading well below a record high of around $2,430 an ounce hit earlier in April.
Easing M.East tensions, rate outlook pressure gold prices
Growing hopes that the conflict between Iran and Israel will not escalate further saw traders begin to price out risk premiums from commodity prices.
Gold had been a key beneficiary of increased safe haven demand over the past two weeks, after Iran and Israel both carried out strikes against each other. But after Israel’s latest attack on Iran, reports suggested that Tehran was not seeking immediate retaliation.
This potential de-escalation sapped away at safe haven demand for gold.
Easing safe haven demand also made gold more vulnerable to the higher-for-longer outlook on U.S. interest rates, especially after hawkish Federal Reserve signals and sticky inflation readings over the past two weeks.
Higher rates bode poorly for gold, given that they increase the opportunity cost of investing in the yellow metal.
Focus this week is on PCE price index data- the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge- for more cues on rates.
Other precious metals also sank on Tuesday. Platinum futures fell 0.9% to $922.35 an ounce, while silver futures slid 0.8% to $27.017 an ounce.
Broader metal prices were also pressured by resilience in the dollar, which remained close to over five-month highs.
Copper, aluminum prices slide from recent highs
Among industrial metals, copper prices slid from near two-year highs on Tuesday after top producer Chile said it will increase production at state-run miner Codelco this year.
Three-month copper futures on the London Metal Exchange fell 1.2% to $9,749.50 a ton, while one-month copper futures fell 1.1% to $4.4343 a pound. Both contracts slid from near two-year highs.
Chiles’s outlook largely offset recent expectations that global copper supplies will tighten amid stricter U.S. sanctions on Russian metal exports. This notion had been a key driver of copper price gains over the past month.
Aluminum prices were also caught in the selling frenzy in industrial metals, and sank 1% from recent 15-month peaks.