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Gold drops 2% as rate hike bets push dollar to an all-time high

?Gold prices fell on?Tuesday as the U.S. Dollar hit a year-high on expectations of a Federal Reserve rate hike, which outweighed support from softer prices for oil amid progress in U.S.Iran negotiations.

By 9:26 am, spot gold had fallen 1.7% to $4118.73 an ounce. ET (1326 GMT).

U.S. Gold Futures for August Delivery?fell by 1.6% to $4135.60 an ounce.

The U.S. Dollar rose to its highest levels in over a year, Tuesday. This made gold more expensive for buyers from abroad.

"At the moment, gold and silver aren't looking at the Middle East." Bob Haberkorn is a senior market analyst at StoneX. He believes that they are more interested in what the Federal Reserve has said over the past week.

Investors have increased their bets for interest rate hikes after Kevin Warsh, the new Fed chair, sent hawkish signals against inflation. According to the CME FedWatch Tool, traders now expect a rate increase by December. This is up from the 61% they expected before the Fed's meeting last week.

Gold is often seen to be a hedge against rising inflation. However, its non-yielding properties make it less attractive in an environment with high interest rates. The United States has waived its sanctions against Iran for 60 days, starting Monday, following the first round of talks in a new peace agreement, although hostilities continue in Lebanon, according to officials. U.S. Vice-President JD Vance had earlier said that talks with Iranian officials held in Switzerland laid the?good basis for a final deal', and that tanker traffic through the Strait of Hormuz, which was previously clogged, is picking up.

Brent crude futures dropped more than 1%, to $77.07 per barrel.

Investors now await ?U.S. The?Fed will release its preferred inflation indicator, Personal Consumption Spending data, on Thursday. This information can provide further clues about monetary policy.

(Reporting by Sukanya Mitra and Anjana Anil in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Ananda) (Reporting by Sukanya Mitra and Anjana Anil in Bengaluru; Editing by Jonathan Ananda)

(source: Reuters)