Economy

Gold eases after divided Fed rate cut vote; silver hits new high

Spot gold fell 0.3% to $4,217.09 per ounce, as of 1111 GMT. U.S. gold futures ⁠for February ‌delivery gained 0.5% to $4,244.70 per ounce.

Gold edged lower on Thursday, as traders weighed the ​U.S. Federal Reserve’s divided vote on a quarter-percentage-point interest rate cut, while silver climbed to yet another ⁠record high.

Spot gold fell 0.3% to $4,217.09 per ounce, as of 1111 GMT. U.S. gold futures ⁠for February ‌delivery gained 0.5% to $4,244.70 per ounce.

“It’s just an overpositioning (in gold) in expectation of the rate cut, which did happen, and therefore you’re seeing some selling ⁠pressure,” said independent analyst Ross Norman, adding that gold’s fundamentals remained intact.

The Fed cut interest rates by a quarter of a percentage point on Wednesday in a rare divided vote, but signalled a pause on further easing as officials look ⁠ahead to assess the direction of ​the job market and inflation that “remains somewhat elevated.”

Lower interest rates typically benefit non-yielding assets such as gold.

Projections issued after ‍the two-day meeting showed most policymakers see just one rate cut in 2026. Fed Chair Jerome Powell offered ​no indication of when another cut might occur.

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that the Fed’s rate cut could have been larger. Trump is set to announce the new Fed chair early next year, with White House economic adviser Kevin Hassett being a frontrunner.

Investors are now looking out for November’s non-farm payrolls and unemployment rate data, due on December 16, for further clues on the Fed’s next move.

Spot silver rose 1% to $62.39 per ounce, after hitting a record high of $62.88 earlier in the session, bringing its year-to-date ⁠gain to 116% on strong industrial demand, declining inventories ‌and its addition to the U.S. critical minerals list.

“Silver’s fundamentals remain incredibly positive. There is a phenomenal tailwind with the critical minerals list and the possibility that we might ‌see some stock ⁠building,” which would further increase market tightness, Norman added.

Elsewhere, platinum gained 0.4% to $1,662.15, while palladium fell ⁠1% to $1,461.50. 

© ZAWYA 

GLOBAL BUSINESS AND FINANCE MAGAZINE

Recent Posts

Business investment in the era of digital transformation

The weak performance of business investment across the OECD since the Global Financial Crisis holds…

4 days ago

Dollarisation waves: Insights from the BIS international bond database

The US dollar has dominated the international monetary system since the end of Bretton Woods.…

4 days ago

Ten Charts that Explain the Global Waste Crisis

Solid waste is one of the most visible by-products of human prosperity—and one of the…

4 days ago

Investing for tomorrow: long-term investment, economic scale and the green transition

Climate mitigation investment increases with long horizons, economic scale and investor diversity, underscoring long-term capital…

4 days ago

What the war in Iran means for China

China is relatively inured to the Iran conflict, but less external demand could hit its…

4 days ago

Our underappreciated international reserve system

The composition of international reserves is in a constant state of flux. This column identifies…

7 days ago