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Gold prices drop as investors prepare for the upcoming U.S. employment data

Investors grew cautious on Tuesday ahead of the key U.S. employment data that is due later in the day. This data will shed light on potential Federal Reserve interest rates cuts.

As of 1102 GMT, spot gold fell 0.6%, to $4,277.20 an ounce. Bullion is up 64% for the year.

U.S. Gold Futures fell 0.7% to $4,305.30.

Gold is down today as investors profited ahead of the?key U.S. economic data that will determine Fed rate expectations for next year, said Lukman otunuga senior research analyst at FXTM. He added that the weakness below the psychological mark of $4,300 is keeping the bears in play.

The combined employment reports for October and November are the focus of attention, but a number key details will not be available due to a lack?data collection after the longest U.S. Government shutdown ever.

A survey of economists estimated that U.S. nonfarm employment would likely increase by 50,000 jobs in November, following a?decline expected in October. The unemployment rate, however, was estimated at 4.4%.

Investors will also be looking at the Consumer Price Index and Personal Consumption Expenditures index for November, which are due this week, to get more clues about monetary policy in 2019.

Bullion that does not yield is typically found in environments with lower rates.

Silver spot fell 1.5%, to $62.98 an ounce after reaching a record high on Friday of $64.65.

Otunuga said that "Silver is still influenced by the forces that are pushing gold up - profit-taking, and ETF withdrawals ahead of major US economic releases."

The metal has risen 118% in value for the year. This is due to the tight physical market, macro-economic factors that support gold, industrial demand, and its inclusion on the U.S. Critical Minerals list.

Palladium, on the other hand, dipped 0.2%, to $1.563.69 but remained near a 2-month high.

The European Commission will likely reverse its ban on new combustion-engine vehicles in the EU from 2035. This move is "likely" to support internal combustion engines, which use palladium and platinum, said Nitesh Sha, commodities strategist at WisdomTree.

He added that this year's gold-and-silver rally had also attracted investor attention to palladium and platinum. (Reporting and editing by Leroy Leo in Bengaluru, with Pablo Sinha reporting from Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)