Gold slid more than 1 percent on Tuesday, falling for a third day to hit its lowest this year as a rise in US borrowing costs pushed up the dollar and overshadowed the impact of strife in Gaza. Downward momentum in gold picked up after the metal broke below support at its 200-day moving average at $1,306 an ounce. That firmly underpinned prices earlier this month. Spot gold lost 1.6 percent at $1,290.91 an ounce by 1:35 p.m. EDT (1735 GMT), earlier hitting its lowest since late December at $1,289.40. US gold futures for June delivery settled down $27.90, or 2.12 percent, at $1,290.30 per ounce.
Israeli troops shot dead dozens of Palestinian protesters on the Gaza border Monday when the high-profile opening of the US embassy to Israel in Jerusalem by the Trump administration raised tension to a boiling point. But gold investors were fixated on the US dollar, which rose versus a currency basket as 10-year US bond yields shot above 3 percent, sending borrowing costs higher in a number of other countries.
"It's a risk-off play across the board. The downward slide in pretty much all commodities and equities, you can refer that to a stronger dollar and higher yields," said David Meger, director of metals trading at High Ridge Futures. A Federal Reserve official backed the case for further US interest rate hikes, saying inflation had not yet reached the US central bank's 2 percent goal in a sustained way.
"The market's been waiting for the next rate hike by the Fed ... and I think gold prices are going to remain under pressure till we get through that hike," ANZ analyst Daniel Hynes said in a note. Silver declined 1.5 percent at $16.26 an ounce, earlier hitting its lowest in nearly two weeks at $16.18 an ounce. Platinum lost 1.2 percent at $893.99 per ounce, falling to a 1-1/2-week low of $892.24 per ounce. Palladium dropped 1 percent at $986 an ounce, earlier dipping to a one-week low of $964. It broke support at its 200-day moving average at $988 an ounce.