Gold heads for biggest monthly drop in more than 17 years

Gold prices saw a slight uptick on Tuesday, buoyed by a weaker dollar. However, the precious metal is on track for its worst monthly performance in over 17 years. Soaring energy prices have dampened expectations for a U.S. interest rate cut this y...

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Gold prices saw a slight increase on Tuesday due to a weaker dollar. However, the precious metal is heading for its worst month in over 17 years.
Gold rose on Tuesday but stayed on track for its biggest monthly drop in more than 17 years as investors flocked to the dollar as the favoured safe haven amid the Middle East war that has raised inflation fears and bets for hawkish monetary policy response.

Spot gold climbed 0.9% to $4,550.68 per ounce by 0727 GMT. U.S. gold futures for April delivery ‌gained 0.5% to $4,580.70.

Bullion ⁠has ⁠declined more than 13% this month, putting it on track for its steepest decline since October 2008. Prices are, however, up about 5% for the quarter, having scaled a record high of $5,594.82 on January 29. Prices are down 18.70% from record highs.


"Traders are still seeing gold through the lens of a value investment at these levels, given where the precious metal was trading just a few months ago. So, it's a combination of ⁠falling oil, ‌a dip in the dollar and attractive buying levels, which has propelled gold higher today," said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst, KCM Trade.

Gold is ⁠typically seen as a hedge against inflation and geopolitical risks, but the war-driven surge in energy costs is also raising expectations for higher interest rates and boosting the dollar's appeal as the preferred safe haven.

The dollar was headed for its biggest monthly gain since July, making it as the strongest safe asset, supported by the U.S. status as an energy exporter and investors' flight to cash over the past month of conflict. [USD/]
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Traders have almost completely priced out ‌any chance of a U.S. rate cut this year from about two cuts expected before the war. [FEDWATCH]

"If the Strait of Hormuz remains closed, oil prices could remain volatile with potential for ⁠further upside on supply constraints. So, this high oil story, which has plagued gold prices since the conflict began, hasn't gone away yet," Waterer said.

Goldman Sachs, however, said it continues to expect gold prices will reach $5,400 per troy ounce by end‑2026 on central bank diversification and Federal Reserve easing.

Among other metals, spot silver rose 2.7% to $71.89 per ounce, spot platinum gained 1% to $1,917.49, and palladium was up 1.5% at $1,427. All three metals were down about 20% each so far in March.
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