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Gold reaches a new high after Fed comments renew rate-cutting bets

Gold reaches a new high after Fed comments renew rate-cutting bets
Gold reaches a new high after Fed comments renew rate-cutting bets

Gold rose on Tuesday, reaching its highest level in over a week. This was despite a strong dollar after Fed policymakers' dovish remarks revived the prospects of an American rate cut in December.

Gold spot rose by 0.1% at $4,140.85 an ounce as of 0457 GMT. This is the highest level since November 14. It follows a 1.8% increase on Monday.

U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery were 1.2% higher, at $4.141.20 an ounce.

Kelvin Wong, senior market analyst at OANDA, said that gold prices recovered in the short-term due to expectations of a rate reduction.

Market participants will be watching any data related to demand in the U.S. with much greater interest, right now, to see if the Fed's concern about a soft demand situation, which could be the labor market, retail sale, or consumer confidence outweighs the so-called "sticky inflation situation."

Fed Governor Christopher Waller stated on Monday that the job market was weak enough to warrant a further quarter-point cut in rates for December. However, any action beyond this depends on a upcoming flood data delayed by government shutdown.

Waller's remarks come after New York Fed president John Williams stated on Friday that U.S. rates of interest could fall "in a near term."

According to the CME FedWatch tool, investors now price in an 81% probability of a rate reduction in December. This is up from 40% last weekend.

Gold that does not yield a return tends to perform well in environments with low interest rates.

This week, the Fed will release key economic data that was delayed due to the government shutdown. These include U.S. retail sale figures, unemployment claims and producer prices.

Gold priced in dollars has seen gains capped as the dollar remained near its six-month-highs from last week.

Other metals rose in price, including spot silver, which rose by 0.2%, to $51.49 an ounce. Platinum rose 1%, to $1.559.61 and palladium rose 0.3%, to $1.399.25. (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu sahu, Ronojoy Mazumdar, and Ishaan arora)

(source: Reuters)