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Gold prices rise ahead of Fed's decision; however, trade optimism limits the upside.

Gold prices rose a little on Wednesday ahead of a Federal Reserve interest rate cut that was widely expected, but easing U.S. China trade tensions held bullion in check.

As of 0257 GMT spot gold rose 0.2% to $3,957.42 an ounce after falling to its lowest level since October 7 on Monday.

U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery eased 0.3%, to $3.971.20 an ounce.

Kelvin Wong, senior market analyst at OANDA, said: "The fuel behind this short-term gold correction is the readjustment from safe-haven instruments to more responsive instruments like global equities because of trade optimism."

In the short term, gold is under pressure from both short-term leverage and technical levels being breached. The fundamentals of gold are still positive.

Over the weekend, top Chinese and U.S. economists hammered out the framework for a trade agreement between U.S. president Donald Trump and his Chinese equivalent Xi Jinping. The deal would halt steeper American tariffs as well as Chinese controls on rare-earth exports.

Trump and Xi will meet in South Korea Thursday.

The progress in U.S. China trade talks has continued to sap the demand for safe-haven assets like gold. This pullback extended as tensions eased. The recent falls may offer central banks an opportunity to increase purchases," ANZ stated in a report.

The Fed is widely anticipated to reduce interest rates by a quarter percentile point at its policy meeting that will take place on Wednesday. Investors are also watching for any future-oriented language from Fed chair Jerome Powell.

At its Thursday policy meeting, the European Central Bank will likely leave interest rates unchanged.

Gold that does not yield is a good investment in low interest rate environments and economic uncertainty.

The gold price has risen by 52% in the past year, with a peak of $4381.21 reached on October 20. This was boosted by economic and geopolitical uncertainty, bets to lower rates, and central bank purchases.

Other metals, such as platinum, palladium, and silver, also saw gains. Platinum rose 0.7% per ounce to $1.574.25 while palladium fell 0.7% at $1.391.07.

(source: Reuters)