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Metals Stocks: Gold and silver advance, buoyed by U.S. stock market weakness

Gold and silver futures regain positive ground Wednesday, inversely tracking weaker trade for stocks and other so-called risk-on markets. Read More...

Gold and silver futures regained positive ground Wednesday, inversely tracking weaker trade for stocks and other so-called risk-on markets.

Gold for June delivery on Comex GCM19, +0.27%  rose $4.80, or 0.4%, to $1,281.90 an ounce, while July silver SIN19, +0.49%  gained 8 cents, or 0.6%, to $14.40 an ounce. On Tuesday, prices logged their lowest settlement of 2019 so far.

Gold has turned lower by 0.3% month to date. Silver, tagged with both investing and industrial use, has exhibited greater volatility around the U.S.-China trade discussions; it added 1.2% for last week, though its monthly drop so far stands at about 3.9%.

The yellow metal is “building on last week’s gain and the one-week high is due to robust Indian demand, stocks falling due to fears of a protracted U.S.-China trade war and poor economic data from the U.S., EU and globally,” Mark O’Byrne, research director at GoldCore, told MarketWatch. “Heightened political and geopolitical uncertainty is also supporting gold.”

Read: From mining lore to lode: Gold grows on trees in Australia

U.S. stocks headed lower on Wall Street Wednesday as worries about trade tensions and the outlook for global growth weighed on equity markets and sparked continued buying interest in government bonds.

U.S.-China trade tensions remained a factor, analysts said, after Chinese state media reports underlined the country’s scope to use rare-earth minerals, used in the production of everyday devices, such as mobile phones, computer memory chips and rechargeable batteries, as an economic weapon.

See: Shares of Chinese Australian rare-earth companies soar amid China threat over exports

Metals gained even as the U.S. dollar DXY, +0.13% ticked higher Wednesday relative to its peers, a break in the typically inverse relationship between the U.S. unit and precious metals priced in dollars. The 10-year Treasury TMUBMUSD10Y, -1.77%  yield continued to trade in the red as bond prices gained, with the yield at its lowest since October 2017.

Gold and other commodities priced in dollars can typically be hurt by a firmer greenback, making them more expensive to users of other currencies, and vice versa. And, lower yields on bonds can be beneficial to assets like gold by reducing the opportunity cost of holding nonyielding metals.

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