"First the dollar flipped, and it looks like interest rates dropped for the 10-year (Treasuries)," said Bart Melek, head of commodity strategy at TD Securities. "The (yield) curve is flattening, suggesting that you might not get as much tightening as thought before." Investors awaited minutes, due on Thursday, of the June US Federal Reserve meeting and US non-farm payrolls data on Friday for clues on the direction of US monetary policy decisions, which affect non-interest yielding gold.
The dollar index declined against a basket of currencies, decreasing the cost of dollar-denominated bullion for investors using other currencies. The United States plans to place tariffs on $34 billion of Chinese goods as of July 6, but world stocks were supported by broad gains in Europe and rising oil prices.
The US Chamber of Commerce denounced US President Donald Trump's handling of global trade disputes, issuing a report that argued those tariffs and retaliation by US partners would boomerang badly on the economy. Analysts warned that gold's rise on Tuesday did not mark the end of its recent downward trend. "It appears quite clear that the trend is still bearish for gold and that a first positive impulse could only arrive if prices soar to $1,255," ActivTrades analyst Carlo Alberto De Casa said.
Silver climbed 1.1 percent to $16.01 an ounce. Platinum gained 2.6 percent at $837.10 an ounce. Earlier, it fell to the lowest since December 2008 at $793. Palladium dropped 0.7 percent at $938.20 per ounce. Autocatalyst metal platinum tumbled as an intensifying US-European Union trade spat pressured precious metals, and political risk in Germany weighed.