Gold touches 10-day high

Gold prices touched a 10-day high on Thursday as the U.S. dollar and Treasury yields slipped after the Federal Reserve signaled an end to its monetary policy tightening cycle.

Spot gold rose 0.4% to $2,034.31 per ounce by 3:17 p.m. ET (2017 GMT). U.S. gold futures settled 2.4% higher at $2,044.90.

“Fed’s dovish pivot was telegraphed over yesterday’s FOMC meeting and very pragmatically gave a green light for markets to price in a more aggressive Fed cutting cycle on the horizon, and we expect that the market will run with it,” said Daniel Ghali, commodity strategist at TD Securities.

“This is extremely positive for gold prices, given that investor demand was one of the missing pieces for the rally to new all-time highs to be sustained.”

Lower interest rates decrease the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion and weigh on the dollar.

The US Dollar slipped to a four-month low, while the U.S. benchmark 10-year yield dropped to its lowest level since late July.

Seventeen of 19 Fed officials projected lower interest rates by end-2024, after the central bank kept interest rates steady for the third meeting in a row, as was widely expected.

Markets are now pricing in around an 77% chance of a rate cut in March from the Fed, according to the CME FedWatch tool.

The European Central Bank also left interest rates unchanged as expected on Thursday.

Spot silver rose 1.6% to $24.13 per ounce, while platinum gained 2.6% to its highest since September at $958.51.

Palladium surged 11% to $1,102.44, set for its best session since March 2020 after hitting a five-year low earlier this month.

After FOMC, the yield curve started to roll over and investors rushed to buy commodities, which is a major driver for the rise in palladium, said Daniel Pavilonis, senior market strategist at RJO Futures.

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