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Gold slips as Fed conference looms, but set for third monthly gain

Gold rates slipped more than 1% to a oneweek low on Tuesday due to an uptick in the dollar and U.S. Treasury yields, although strong safehaven need and central bank purchasing kept bullion on track for its 3rd consecutive regular monthly gain.

Spot gold fell 1.7% to $2,294.84 per ounce, as of 1:56 p.m. ET (1756 GMT).

U.S. gold futures settled 2.3% lower to $2,302.9.

Gold costs have actually acquired 2.8% up until now this month after hitting a record high of $2,431.29 earlier in April.

The dollar rose 0.3% against its rivals, making gold more expensive for other currency holders, while standard 10-year yield also climbed up.

A lot of traders have a lot of earnings locked up in gold and silver, and they want to get to the sidelines into the Fed statement, said Bob Haberkorn, senior market strategist at RJO Futures.

Nevertheless, there's been a great deal of Asian need and strong central bank need. We had flight to safety the last 2 years. So gold market is certainly in a bullish position right now and it will continue to move forward for the remainder of the year.

The U.S. central bank starts its two-day financial policy meeting on Tuesday, where it is expected to hold rates at 5.25% -5.5%. All eyes are on Fed Chair Jerome Powell's speech on Wednesday for more cues on rate-cut projections.

Traders have pared back bets of Fed rate cuts this year due to current hotter-than-expected U.S. economic data and sticky inflation.

Powell's stance might be highly hawkish, pushing expectations of a first rate cut to the fourth quarter or perhaps to next year - this scenario would bode severely for gold, said Ricardo Evangelista, senior expert, ActivTrades.

Meanwhile, area palladium dropped 2% to a near two-month low of $953.32 per ounce, while sibling metal platinum , was down 1.2% at $936.18.

Spot silver fell 2.7% to $26.40 per ounce.

(source: Reuters)