Home Industry Finance Gold steadies as Europe’s energy woes see greenback strengthen Central banks globally are set to keep raising interest rates to fight inflation, weighing on non-yielding assets like gold by Bloomberg September 5, 2022 Gold was steady, as mounting concerns over a worsening energy crisis in Europe drove investors to the greenback over the euro. Bullion climbed Friday to pare a third straight weekly drop after a US jobs report showed employers added a healthy number of jobs in August and a steady stream of people entering the workforce lifted the unemployment rate. This suggested some easing in the tight labour market and offered mixed implications for the Federal Reserve’s monetary policy tightening path. Central banks globally are set to keep raising interest rates to fight inflation, weighing on non-yielding assets like gold. There are growing expectations for the European Central Bank to hike by 75 basis points as soon as Thursday, but the decision remains a challenging one as chief Christine Lagarde and her colleagues manage the twin problems of high price pressures and an impending recession. Europe’s energy crunch is intensifying as Gazprom last week again halted its key gas pipeline indefinitely after Group of Seven leaders agreed to implement a price cap on Russian oil as the Ukraine crisis continues. Germany – the nation most affected by the Nord Stream pipeline cutoff – unveiled a $65bn package to protect consumers. On Friday, European ministers will discuss special measures to rein in soaring energy costs, from gas-price caps to a suspension of power derivatives trading. The euro fell 0.4 per cent on Monday. Spot gold was flat at $1,712.19 an ounce as of 9.16am in Singapore, after rising 0.9 per cent on Friday. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index advanced 0.1 per cent. Silver and platinum were little changed, while palladium declined. Tags assets Europe gold inflation Interest Rates 0 Comments You might also like UAE interest rates unchanged after US Fed announcement JP Morgan identifies top considerations for investors in 2024 How deep are Egypt’s economic troubles? Global markets: Five countries to watch this week