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Gold prices steady before US House vote on reopening government

Investors waited for a House of Representatives vote to reopen federal government. This could provide clarity about economic data, and possible Federal Reserve rate reductions.

As of 8:37 GMT, spot gold remained unchanged at $4,131.80 an ounce. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery rose 0.5%, to $4.137.20 an ounce.

"Everyone awaits more clarity about the government shutdown, and when data will be coming from the U.S.A. again," said UBS Analyst Giovanni Staunovo.

Gold prices are still on an upward trend. Staunovo said that nothing structurally has changed.

Gold prices are up more than 57% in the past year, with a high of $4.381.21 reached on October 20. This is due to geopolitical tensions and economic concerns as well as the Fed's easing monetary policy.

On Monday, the U.S. Senate passed a bill to restore federal funding following a government shutdown that set a new record. House lawmakers returned Tuesday to Washington to vote on a measure that could officially resolve the standoff.

ADP, a payroll processor, reported on Tuesday that U.S. firms were cutting over 11,000 jobs each week until late October.

The market's expectations have changed. CME Group's FedWatch shows a 67% chance of a rate cut of 25 basis points at the Fed meeting next on December 10. This is up from 62% just a day before.

After a period of consolidation, gold prices have broken through the $4,050 level. This confirms the continuation of bullish momentum. The next resistance range is $4.160-$4.170/oz. A breach of this range would push the prices to the record high of 4.380/oz," ANZ stated in a report.

In a note published on Wednesday, JP Morgan said that it expected central banks and consumers would emerge as reliable purchasers during price drops and predicted gold prices will exceed $5,000 in the fourth quarter 2026.

Palladium rose 0.3% to 1,440.75 and platinum gained 0.4%. (Reporting and editing by Alexander Smith in Bengaluru, Anmol Choubey)

(source: Reuters)