Gold prices steady as Israel-Iran conflict rages on; Fed awaited

 

 Gold prices fell slightly in Asian trade on Monday amid some pressure from a strong dollar, although the yellow metal was sitting on strong gains as a worsening Israel-Iran conflict boosted haven demand.

The yellow metal saw some profit-taking on Monday after a nearly 4% jump last week, while resilience in the dollar, before a Federal Reserve meeting, also pressured metal prices across the board. 

Spot gold fell 0.1% to $3,427.78 an ounce, while gold futures for August fell 0.2% to $3,446.45/oz by 00:57 ET (04:57 GMT). 

Gold underpinned by Israel-Iran conflict, US intervention in focus  Gold’s stellar gains came late last week, after Israel struck several targets in Iran, including Tehran’s nuclear facilities.

The attack sparked bitter retaliation by Iran, which launched a series of missile strikes on major Israeli targets, including financial capital Tel Aviv. Some Iranian missiles were also seen breaking through Israel’s “Iron Dome” defense system.

The conflict marks a renewed escalation in tensions between the Middle Eastern countries, and spurred concerns over more regional powers getting involved.

Focus was also on any potential U.S. intervention in the conflict, after President Donald Trump said that his administration was working on hashing out a deal.

But Trump also said that Israel and Iran may have to “fight it out,” potentially signaling that a ceasefire was not close.

The missile exchange over the weekend also saw Iran cancel planned nuclear talks with the U.S., further diminishing the prospect of a deescalation.

3rd party Ad. Not an offer or recommendation by Investing.com. See disclosure here or remove ads. Gold clocked strong gains as concerns over the conflict pushed traders into traditional safe havens, namely bullion.

Dollar strength pressures metal markets, Fed awaited  But gold’s gains were stalled by some resilience in the dollar before a Fed meeting this week. Broader metal prices also weakened.

Platinum futures were an exception, extending a recent rally by nearly 1% to $1,224.0/oz. The white metal hit an over four-year high last week.

Silver futures fell 0.3% to $26.260/oz. 

Among industrial metals, benchmark copper futures on the London Metal Exchange fell 0.1% to $9,627.75 a ton, while U.S. copper futures fell 0.4% to $4.7972 a pound.

The dollar rose about 0.1% in Asian trade, seeing some favorability from increased haven demand.

Positioning in the dollar also increased before a Fed meeting this week, with the central bank likely to keep interest rates unchanged on Wednesday. 

Focus will be squarely on Chair Jerome Powell’s comments on the path of interest rates, especially amid signs of cooling inflation and economic growth.

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