Metals Stocks: Gold Futures Inch Higher, But Head For A Monthly Drop

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Markets/commodities reporter

News editor

Gold prices headed higher Thursday, but were poised for a second monthly drop in a row, as the dollar-denominated metal continued to trade inversely with the greenback.

Gold prices had initially turned a bit lower early Thursday when a round of economic data, a curtain-raiser to the closely watched monthly payrolls report due for release Friday, did little to sway expectations for higher Federal Reserve interest rates as soon as next month.

But after the White House announced that it will impose tariffs on steel and aluminum from Canada, Mexico and the European Union starting Friday, prices for gold moved decidedly higher.

The metal also finds some support amid Italian and Spanish leadership uncertainty and what that could mean for the European Union’s future, as well as developments tied to diplomatic efforts involving North Korea.

Read: Rising angst around global politics doesn’t move gold like it used to

August gold GCQ8, -0.05% was up $1.60, or 0.1%, to $1,308.10 an ounce. The contract traded about 1.3% lower for the month. Based on the most-active futures contracts, gold is down 0.8% in May. The month saw the metal hit a fresh low for 2018 in mid-May and crack the downside of a $1,300-to-$1,350 range that had confined gold for much of this year.

The ICE U.S. Dollar Index DXY, -0.07% was trading nearly flat, after hitting a 10-month high earlier this week. Higher volume takes place in the dollar-priced gold market, leaving the commodity sensitive to the greenback’s moves. The index traded roughly 2.5% higher for the month.

“The primary headwind for gold is the trend for a stronger U.S. dollar,” said Michael Armbruster, managing partner at Altavest. “Interest rate differentials favor the U.S. dollar, so we expect the U.S. Dollar Index to continue to trend higher.”

He said that “geopolitical turmoil around the globe may keep gold anchored, but gold’s near-term prospects are likely sideways to lower given our expectations for a much stronger dollar.”

One chart watcher, however, stressed the importance of comparing dollar-priced gold to euro-priced gold right now, which could point to a bullish turn for the metal. Tom McClellan, technical analyst and editor of the McClellan Market Report, tweeted this week about euro-priced gold’s move to a two-year high. “The [euro] price of gold broke its declining tops line in April, a feat that the [dollar] price has yet to match,” he wrote. “When the two plots disagree, the euro price plot usually ends up being right.”

Meanwhile, the latest Italian headlines indicated that President Sergio Mattarella will give populist leaders more time to form a government, a move that could stave off fresh elections, the threat of which triggered an early-week selloff for global markets.

Read: Trump ready to pull tariff trigger on EU — what analysts say investors should expect

“Understandably, some market participants want to see actual progress in the Italian political stalemate. Meanwhile, Spain is the next European country to test the region’s stability as Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy faces a confidence vote by Friday. Then there’s that nagging trade dispute between the world’s largest economies — the U.S. and China — while Nafta talks have also stalled,” said Fawad Razaqzada, analyst at Forex.com.

“On top of all this, speculators have to consider the impact of Friday’s payrolls data on indices and the dollar and what this may mean for the major [currency] pairs and buck-denominated gold and silver,” he said.

Gold futures prices had ended higher Wednesday, but edged slightly lower in electronic trading when the Federal Reserve’s Beige Book, a snapshot of domestic economic activity, showed the U.S. grew “moderately” from late April to early May, indicating to most that the central bank remains on track to raise interest rates next month.

Thursday’s data largely backed that view. Consumer spending jumped for a second straight month though the yearly change in the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge didn’t budge. Another report showed a drop in weekly jobless benefits claims.

In other trading, July silver SIN8, -0.21% fell 0.1% to $16.53 an ounce, with the contract up about 0.8% for the month. July copper HGN8, +0.07%  changed hands at $3.07 a pound, little changed for the day, and down 0.1% for the month. July platinum PLN8, +0.34%  added 0.2% to $910.70 an ounce, trading up 0.7% for the month. September palladium PAU8, +0.91% rose 0.8% to $982.50 an ounce, set for a monthly rise of 2.8%.

Among exchange-traded funds, the SPDR Gold Shares GLD, -0.06%  rose 0.2%, as the iShares Silver Trust SLV, -0.13%  added 0.1%. The VanEck Vectors Gold Miners ETF GDX, -0.36%  was down 0.4%.

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