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As dollar and yields are easing, gold gains more than 1%.

As dollar and yields are easing, gold gains more than 1%.

Gold prices rose over 1% Monday, as the dollar and U.S. bonds yields fell amid uncertainty about trade talks in advance of an August 1 deadline for U.S. countries to reach agreements or face additional tariffs.

At 9:52 ET (1350 GMT), spot gold rose 1.2% to $3,390.79 an ounce. U.S. Gold Futures rose 1.3% to $3.402.40.

The U.S. Dollar Index was down by 0.4%. This made dollar-denominated Gold more affordable to buyers who use other currencies. Meanwhile, benchmark yields on 10-year U.S. Treasury notes hit a record low.

David Meger is director of metals futures at High Ridge Futures.

According to EU diplomats, the European Union is looking at a wider range of counter-measures that could be taken against the United States as prospects for a trade agreement acceptable with Washington are fading.

According to the CME FedWatch tool, traders have priced in a 63% probability of a rate reduction in September.

U.S. Treasury secretary Scott Bessent stated that the Federal Reserve as an institution needed to be examined and whether or not it was successful.

Meger says that speculation about a rate cut earlier than expected in the U.S. is increasing, and that speculations around a possible Fed Chair Jerome Powell replacement or reshaping the Fed are adding to market anxiety.

Gold is a hedge for uncertainty, and it tends to do well in an environment with low interest rates.

China, the largest gold consumer in the world, imported 63 metric tonnes of the precious metal during the month of June, the lowest since January. In June, its imports of the precious metal fell by 6.1% compared to the previous month.

Silver spot gained 1.8%, to $38.86 an ounce. Platinum rose 2.2%, to $1,453.17, and palladium rose 3.5%, to $1,284.46. Reporting by Sherin E. Varghese in Bengaluru and Ashitha S. Shivaprasad, Editing by Mark Potter

(source: Reuters)