Gold futures fell early Thursday and may be heading for back-to-back losses after the haven metal scored a nearly six-year high early in the week.
The impending sideline meetings at the Group of 20 conference in Japan between U.S. President Donald Trump and his Chinese counterpart Xi Jinping held the attention of financial markets, which had been supportive for gold in recent sessions.
August gold GCQ19, -0.64% was down $6.50, or 0.5%, at $1,409.00 an ounce. It’s roughly $9 off the recent high-water mark of $1,418.70 hit Tuesday, the most robust settlement price for a most-active contract since Aug. 28, 2013, according to FactSet data.
Read: Why gold prices have climbed to their highest since 2013
“Gold continues to soften after its euphoric surge see many investors grow cautiously optimistic that positive developments will come out of... the Trump and [China’s] Xi meeting at the sidelines of the G-20 meeting in Osaka. The key to the deal may be if Trump lifts part of the ban on Huawei in exchange for seeing Xi deliver changes to Chinese law to help enforce other parts of the trade deal,” said Edward Moya, senior market analyst with Oanda.
Trump and Xi will use the G-20 meeting this weekend to “press pause” on their continuing trade war, analysts have said. Early Thursday, reports said China had set the terms for the negotiations. The Wall Street Journal reported that Xi will present President Donald Trump terms, focused in part on easier treatment of the controversial Huawei Technologies Co.
The demands raise some doubts that the two sides can achieve a detente and comes after a report from the South China Morning Post that a tentative U.S.-China truce had been achieved.
Stocks were reflecting some nervousness ahead of the meetings, though were also tugged lower by specific movers, such as Boeing Co. Gold and stocks broke with their typically inverse relationship so far Thursday. Read Market Snapshot. Gold also fell despite modest weakness for the leading dollar index DXY, +0.01% .
“The yellow metal could see further weakness if the two nations come closer to outlining this weekend, but should see long-term investors buy the dip on expectations of global easing efforts from central banks across the world,” Moya added.
Expectations for lower interest rates among global central banks and geopolitical concerns centered on trade spats and tensions with Iran had been making gold a preferred investment this spring, especially as competing low-risk U.S. Treasury bond yields dropped. The yield on the 10-year note TMUBMUSD10Y, -0.68% fell below 2% in recent sessions.
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July silver SIN19, -0.81% fell 9 cents, or 0.7%, to $15.195 an ounce and July copper HGN19, -0.39% shed 0.4% to $2.7025 a pound. July platinum PLN19, -0.55% fell 0.3% to $813.90 an ounce, while September palladium PAU19, -0.05% fell 0.7% to $1,514.60 an ounce.