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Gold drops on caution before key US employment data

Gold prices fell on Thursday, as a strong dollar weighed on investors. They were preparing for a major U.S. employment report due later this week, which will be used to assess the Federal Reserve’s policy and gauge U.S. influence on Venezuela.

As of 0539 GMT, spot gold dropped 0.4% to $4435.62 an ounce. U.S. gold GCcv1 futures for February delivery dropped 0.4% to $4444.40.

Bernard Sin, Regional Director- Greater China at MKS PAMP, said that traders are weighing increased geopolitical pressures, such as the U.S.'s intervention in Venezuela, against macroeconomic signals coming from the United States.

The?dollar remained near its two-week high as the market focused on several U.S. labour data releases released this week.

Investors are still cautious about volatility and potential profit-taking, as Sin added.

Bullion is only about $110 from the record high of $4,549.71 that was hit on December 29. Gains have been curtailed by a strong dollar and profit taking.

The data released on Wednesday shows that the number of job openings in the United States dropped to its lowest level in 14 months, while hiring returned to its usual sluggish pace. This indicates a waning labor demand.

Investors will focus on the non-farm payrolls in the United States on Friday to get more monetary policy cues.

Kelvin Wong is a senior analyst at OANDA. He said that the Bloomberg Commodity Index weightage rebalancing this week may impact flows because of lower silver and gold targets weightages. This allows short-term?speculators book profits and pressurize prices.

Rebalancing the BCOM index annually is done to make sure that the index accurately reflects the global commodity markets. The window for this year is from?January 9-15.

Silver spot fell 2.6%, to $76.08 an ounce. It had hit an all-time high price of $83.62 per ounce on December 29.

HSBC predicts that silver will trade between $58-$88 in 2026. This is due to a tight physical supply and high investment demand. However, the bank warns about a possible market correction in later years.

After reaching a record high of $2,478.50 per ounce on Monday, spot platinum fell 3.3%, to $2230.90.

Palladium shed 2.8% to $1,715.0 per ounce. Ishaan arora, Bengaluru. Sumana Nandy and Janane Venkatraman edited the report. Rashmi aich reported.

(source: Reuters)