Spot gold was up 0.5 percent at $1,318.67 an ounce by 1:41 pm EST (1841 GMT). Its session high of $1,326.56 was its highest since September 15. US gold futures for February delivery settled up $5.60, or 0.4 percent, at $1,319.30 per ounce. The report "added pressure on the US dollar and helped gold," said Bart Melek, head of commodity strategy at TD Securities in Toronto. "Gold did better, despite the fact that the yields across the curve moved higher," he said.
"With bond yields going up so steadily and looking like they're going higher that could be a bit of a headwind given the fact that gold is a non interest-bearing asset," said Bill O'Neill, partner, co-founder of LOGIC Advisors in Upper Saddle River, New Jersey. Among other metals, palladium dropped 1.5 percent at $1,083.97 an ounce, after hitting a record high on Tuesday at $1,111.40. Tightening emissions standards and a switch away from diesel cars to more palladium-heavy gasoline models has shored up demand expectations for the autocatalyst metal.
Platinum was up 0.9 percent at $973.60 an ounce, after hitting a nearly four-month high of $973.90. Silver was up 0.4 percent at $17.01 an ounce, after earlier drifting to $16.86, its lowest since December 29.