Gold gains over 2% after soft US inflation data

Gold  |  2026-07-15 05:08:54   |   By

The Consumer Price Index advanced 3.5% in the 12 months through June, after surging 4.2% in May, while core CPI inflation was ​unchanged over the month, after gaining 0.2% in May.

SEATTLE (Scrap Monster): Gold gained more than 2% ​on Tuesday after softer-than-expected inflation data boosted hopes of the U.S. Federal ‌Reserve adopting a less hawkish stance.

Spot gold was up 1.6% at $4,063.78 per ounce by 1:30 p.m. EDT (1730 GMT), after falling to its lowest level since July 1 earlier in the session.

U.S. gold futures settled ​1.6% higher at $4,069.70.

The U.S. dollar fell 0.6%, making greenback priced-bullion more affordable for ​other currency holders.

'Gold gallops higher on a surprisingly subdued CPI report that ⁠saw headline dive lower but more importantly, core unchanged versus 0.2%. This should drop ​rate hike expectations sharply at least for the July and September meetings,' said Tai Wong, ​an independent metals trader.

U.S. consumer inflation slowed more than expected in June. The Consumer Price Index advanced 3.5% in the 12 months through June, after surging 4.2% in May, while core CPI inflation was ​unchanged over the month, after gaining 0.2% in May.

After the data, traders exited bets that ​the Fed would hike rates at its July 28-29 meeting.

Investors will also watch the U.S. Producer Price ‌Index (PPI) ⁠data, due Wednesday.

In a testimony to the House Financial Services Committee, Fed Chair Kevin Warsh reiterated that his main thrust right now is to bring inflation back to the U.S. central bank's 2% target.

On the geopolitical front, Iran fired ballistic missiles at a U.S. air base ​in Jordan and the ​United States attacked ⁠Iranian targets for five hours in a battle for control of the Strait of Hormuz that has pushed up oil prices to ​four-week highs.

'The resumption of serious hostilities with Iran will have headline ​inflation already ⁠higher this month, so gold's rally will be tempered to $4,200 over the next few sessions and perhaps $63-$64 in silver isn't out of the question,' Wong said.

Higher inflation could prompt central banks ⁠to keep ​interest rates elevated for longer, weighing on non-yielding ​assets such as gold.

Among other metals, spot silver rose 2% to $58.79 per ounce, platinum added 1.6% to $1,629.83, and palladium ​climbed 4.8% to $1,307.30.

Courtesy: www.aljazeera.com