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    Gold prices steady amid rate cut speculation, copper dips on China inflation By Investing.com



    Investing.com– Gold prices rose slightly in Asian trade on Wednesday as comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell sparked increased speculation over when the central bank will begin cutting interest rates.

    Among industrial metals, copper prices sank, wiping out a bulk of a recent recovery following mixed inflation signals from top copper importer China. 

    Gold saw some strength in recent sessions as the dropped amid increased expectations for a September rate cut. But the yellow metal stalled as the Fed still gave no clear signals on the path of interest rates.

    rose 0.2% to $2,367.73 an ounce, while expiring in August rose 0.3% to $2,373.90 an ounce by 00:20 ET (04:20 GMT). 

    Gold steadies after Powell testimony, CPI data on tap 

    Prices of the yellow metal stalled their recent rally after Powell flagged some cooling in the labor market and progress in bringing down inflation.

    But the Fed Chair reiterated the central bank’s commitment to its 2% inflation target, and gave no direct cues on when the Fed will begin cutting rates.

    While traders largely maintained their bets on a September rate cut, Powell’s testimony spurred some increased caution before key inflation data due on Thursday. The reading is expected to show inflation cooling further in June, albeit slightly. 

    The dollar found some strength following Powell’s testimony. The Fed Chair is also set to testify before the House later on Wednesday.

    Gold’s outlook has been tied largely to the path of interest rates this year, especially as high rates pressured precious metal markets for the past two years. 

    Other precious metals retreated on Wednesday. fell 0.3% to $997.05 an ounce, while fell 0.1% to $31.025 an ounce.

    Silver has largely outperformed gold in recent months, with the metal’s industrial applications giving it an edge over gold.

    Copper prices dip on mixed China inflation

    Benchmark on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.3% to $9,844.50 a tonne, while one-month sank 0.4% to $4.5652 a pound.

    Sentiment towards the red metal was dented by mixed inflation data from top importer China. Chinese inflation shrank in June as spending remained under pressure from a weak economic outlook for China.

    While inflation shrank at its slowest pace in 16 months, China’s deflationary trend still remained largely in play.


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