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Gold drops as dollar firms, trade deal hopes sap safe-haven demand

Gold prices fell on Friday due to a stronger dollar and progress in U.S. - EU trade negotiations, which weakened demand for safe havens.

By 11:23 am, spot gold had fallen 1% to $3333.12 an ounce. ET (1523 GMT). U.S. Gold Futures fell 1.2% to $3333.70.

The U.S. Dollar Index rebounded after a two-week low. This made bullion prices more expensive for foreign buyers. Meanwhile, the yields on benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury bonds remained unchanged.

The Japan deal was important, and there is hope that a U.S./EU agreement will be reached before the deadline of August 1. This is reducing demand for safe haven assets as capital flows to risky assets due to an elevated risk appetite, said Peter Grant.

The European Commission, following this week's U.S. Japan trade agreement, said that a deal with the U.S. was within reach. EU members also approved counter-tariffs for U.S. products in case negotiations fail.

The data shows that U.S. unemployment claims have fallen to a 3-month low. This indicates a stable job market, despite slow hiring.

The Federal Reserve is expected to use stable labor market data to justify holding rates at 4.25% to 4.50% during its next meeting, despite signs that inflation may be increasing due to President Donald Trump's tariffs on imports.

Trump's surprise trip to the central banks marked a new attempt to put pressure on Chair Jerome Powell. The President was again calling for a rate cut.

Grant added that gold may be able to attract "buying interests probably at the $3,300 level but not break out to new highs until the Fed decision." The meeting could indicate rate cuts in the second half of the year.

Gold is usually more profitable during times of uncertainty or low interest rates.

Spot silver dropped 2.1% to 38.25 dollars per ounce. Palladium fell 1.6% to $1,208.20, while platinum was down 1.6% to $1,385.94. This week, all three metals suffered losses.

(source: Reuters)