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Gold drops as traders monitor US-China trade talks at London

Market participants were waiting for further developments in ongoing U.S. China trade talks, which are now entering their second day.

As of 0125 GMT, spot gold dropped 0.5% to $3311.16 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures fell by 0.7%, to $3330.90.

The high-level talks between U.S. officials and Chinese officials have extended into a second session, with topics ranging from rare earth restrictions to tariffs.

Tim Waterer is the chief market analyst for KCM Trade. He said that "with these important U.S. China trade talks still underway, gold is currently trading cautiously" until we can see if there is any progress between the two superpowers.

U.S. president Donald Trump noted that his administration is "doing very well" in negotiations.

Both sides agreed last month to temporarily pause tariffs. This provided some relief for the financial markets.

If traders believe that U.S. and China are on track for a wider trade agreement, the demand for safe-haven assets like gold may ease.

China's data showed that export growth in May slowed down to a 3-month low as U.S. Tariffs affected shipments. Factory-gate deflation also reached its highest level in the past two years.

Investors are waiting for Wednesday's U.S. Inflation data to get more clues about the Federal Reserve's policy.

Waterer stated that "if CPI ticks higher, that is expected, but if CPI jumps, that may raise alarm bells among investors and any flight to safety that results could boost the gold price."

When interest rates are low, gold tends to perform well.

Other than that, silver spot was down 0.6% at $36.51 an ounce. Platinum fell 0.8% to 1,210.46 and palladium dropped 0.2% to 1 071.75. (Reporting and editing by Rashmi aich in Bengaluru, Anmol Choubey)

(source: Reuters)