(Bloomberg) -- Gold traded in a narrow band on Wednesday after falling 1.3% the previous session, when traders booked profits from the metal’s latest record-breaking run.
Most Read from Bloomberg
-
NYC’s Congestion Pricing Pulls In $48.6 Million in First Month
-
The Trump Administration Takes Aim at Transportation Research
-
Shelters Await Billions in Federal Money for Homelessness Providers
-
New York’s Congestion Pricing Plan Faces Another Legal Showdown
Bullion traded near $2,914 an ounce, about $40 shy of Monday’s fresh all-time high. It’s been supported in recent days by weak US data that’s boosted hopes for a Federal Reserve interest-rate cut as soon as July, while President Donald Trump’s increasing tariff threats have increased haven demand.
Prices have also been bolstered by renewed interest in bullion-backed exchange-traded funds. Last week, net inflows were the largest since 2022, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.
ETF buyers could “drive the next leg higher in gold and could more than offset weak technical trends and a weak physical market,” Standard Chartered Plc analyst Suki Cooper said in a note.
US consumer confidence fell this month by the most since August 2021, according to data on Tuesday. The figures followed recent disappointments in retail, services and housing — prompting traders to boost bets on rate cuts this year. Lower borrowing costs tend to benefit gold as it doesn’t pay any interest.
Traders were also monitoring fresh trade threats from Trump after the president signed an executive action Tuesday directing the Commerce Department to examine possible copper tariffs.
Looking ahead, investors will be analyzing Friday’s core personal consumption expenditures price index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, for clues about the monetary policy trajectory.
Spot gold was little changed at $2,913.60 an ounce at 9:45 a.m. in London. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was up 0.2%. Silver, platinum and palladium all rose.
--With assistance from Jack Ryan.
Most Read from Bloomberg Businessweek
-
Walmart Wants to Be Something for Everyone in a Divided America
-
China Learned to Embrace What the US Forgot: The Virtues of Creative Destruction
©2025 Bloomberg L.P.