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Gold drops on stronger dollar and US-China trade hopes

Gold prices fell Monday as investors waited for the monetary policy signals from major central bank meetings scheduled later this week.

As of 0655 GMT, spot gold was down by 0.8%, at $4,077.11 an ounce. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery fell 1.1% to $4.090.90.

The U.S. Dollar rose to its highest level in more than a two-week period against the Japanese yen. This made gold more expensive for holders of other currencies.

On Sunday, the top Chinese and U.S. economists hammered out the framework for a trade agreement that U.S. president Donald Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping will decide on this week.

This potential trade agreement between the U.S.and China came as a complete surprise and was a positive for the markets in general. The developments are also negative for gold, according to Capital.com analyst Kyle Rodda.

The market is now calmer and the sentiment has cooled. Gold is gaining support because of the prospects for loose fiscal and monetary policies in the future. If that is the case, then gold's upward trend should continue."

Federal Reserve officials are widely expected to lower interest rates at their meeting on Wednesday by a quarter of a percentage point. This view is supported by Friday's inflation report, which was softer than expected.

The markets will be looking for any comments from Fed chair Jerome Powell that are forward-looking.

In a low-interest rate environment, gold that does not yield tends to be more profitable.

SPDR Gold Trust is the largest gold-backed ETF in the world. Its holdings dropped 0.52% on Friday to 1,046.93 tons from 1,052.37 tonnes on Thursday.

Other metals include spot silver, which fell 0.6% per ounce to $48.31, platinum, which rose 0.7% to 1,616.30, and palladium, up 0.5% at $1,435.75.

(source: Reuters)