Gold prices fell sharply as major central banks adopted a hawkish stance on interest rates. The Federal Reserve, European Central Bank (ECB), Bank of England (BoE), and Bank of Japan (BoJ) all left their rates unchanged. However, officials’ comments pointed to potential future rate increases.
Fed Chair Powell stated that some Fed members were ready to consider a rate hike. The ECB indicated that inflation remains a serious threat, with traders now expecting two rate hikes from the ECB this year. All BoE members voted to keep the rate at 3.75%, contrary to analyst expectations that some would favor a cut.
The Bank of Japan signaled it would think about a rate hike at its next meeting, despite rising energy prices impacting the Japanese economy. Higher interest rates are bearish for non-yielding assets like gold and other precious metals. The sudden end of the global rate cut cycle also deals a blow to bullish gold sentiment.
Geopolitical tensions are a negative factor for gold markets. Central banks continue to buy gold to diversify their reserves, but speculative traders are selling positions due to falling risk appetite. Gold is currently trying to settle below support between $4660 and $4680, with the next support level seen at $4400 to $4420.
Silver prices tested new lows, though some traders bought into the pullback, causing a rebound from session lows. Silver faces support at $71.00, then at $64.00 to $65.00. Platinum also lost ground, as palladium markets dropped 2%.