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Gold prices rise on higher Fed rate cuts bets and a weaker dollar

Gold prices rise on higher Fed rate cuts bets and a weaker dollar
Gold prices rise on higher Fed rate cuts bets and a weaker dollar

Gold prices increased on Monday due to a falling dollar and growing expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates next month. As of 09:12 am, spot gold was up by 0.4% to $4,081.52 an ounce. ET (1412 GMT). U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery were unchanged at $4,079.30 an ounce. Dollar index fell, making dollar priced bullion more accessible to holders of other currencies.

Bart Melek is the head of commodity strategy at TD Securities.

Melek continued, "A combination (of lower expectations) and a stronger U.S. Dollar has helped gold in the current environment." John Williams, the New York Fed president, said on Friday that U.S. rates could drop "in the short term" without endangering the Fed's goal of inflation and while protecting against a job market slide. The CME FedWatch tool shows that bets on a rate reduction next month are at 76%. The CME FedWatch tool showed that gold, which is a non-yielding investment, does well when interest rates are low and when there is geopolitical unrest.

Investors will be watching for important economic data that were delayed by the government shutdown. These include U.S. retail sale, unemployment claims, and producer prices figures, which are due this week.

The U.S., Ukraine, and other countries continued their talks Monday in order to come up with a plan that would end the conflict with Russia. They had previously agreed to revise a U.S. proposal, which many considered to be too favorable to Moscow.

In a recent note, Rhona O’Connell, an expert at StoneX said that "gold is likely to continue to be in demand, but it will remain range-bound between $4,000 and $3,100." Spot silver rose 0.5% to $50.24 an ounce. Platinum rose 1.1%, while palladium increased 0.8%, to $1385.85. (Reporting and editing by Nick Zieminski in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)