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Gold continues to fall as investors take profits before US inflation data

Gold continues to fall as investors take profits before US inflation data

Investors booked profits before the U.S. key inflation data that is due this week, which will determine whether gold prices are still rising or falling.

As of 9:22 am, spot gold was down by 1.7%, at $4,054.69 an ounce. After reaching as high as $4,161.17 in earlier sessions, ET (1322 GMT) saw gold fall 1.7% to $4.054.69 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery fell 0.9%, to $4.072.10 an ounce.

The U.S. Dollar Index rose by 0.2%, reaching a new high of one week. This makes dollar-priced gold more expensive.

Gold prices are at multiple record highs this year and have gained 54%. This is due to geopolitical tensions and economic uncertainty as well as expectations of U.S. interest rate cuts. Prices dropped 5.3% on the Tuesday after hitting a record-high of $4,381.21 during the previous session.

David Meger is the director of metals at High Ridge Futures.

The 21-day moving median at $4,005 is a technical support for gold.

The core inflation rate is expected to remain at 3.1% for September, according to Friday's U.S. Consumer Price Index report. This report was delayed because of the U.S. Government shutdown.

Investors are almost fully pricing in a rate cut of 25 basis points at the Federal Reserve meeting next week.

In low-interest-rate environments, gold, which is a non-yielding investment, tends benefit.

In the meantime, Russia announced on Wednesday that they were still preparing for an upcoming summit between U.S. president Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin.

Investors also await clarity regarding the potential meeting next week between Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping.

"We maintain a bullish outlook for gold and silver into 2026, and following a much-needed correction/consolidation, traders will likely pause for thought before concluding the developments that drove the historic rallies this year has not gone away," said Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, in a note.

Silver spot fell 1%, to $48,27 an ounce. Tuesday, it fell 7.1%.

Palladium fell 1.6% to $1,430, while platinum dropped 0.1% to $1.549.85.

(source: Reuters)