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Dollar gains as dollar fears fade and gold hovers at 3-week low.

The gold price was little changed Tuesday. It hovered near its three-week-low as the dollar strengthened and fears of a tariff war in the world subsided.

As of 0210 GMT, spot gold remained at $3,318.79 an ounce. Bullion fell to its lowest level since the 9th of July in the previous session.

U.S. Gold Futures climbed 0.2% to $3,317.50.

Gold trading below $3,300 is still attracting buyers. Although trade deals and the stronger USD have a negative impact on gold's short-term dynamics, there are still opportunities for upside in the future," said Tim Waterer, KCM Trade's Chief Market Analyst.

The top U.S. economic officials and Chinese officials met on Monday in Stockholm for five hours of discussions aimed at resolving the long-standing economic disputes that are at the heart of the trade war between two of the world's largest economies. They also sought to extend the truce of three months.

Sunday, the U.S. and the European Union reached a framework agreement on trade. The U.S. imposed a 15% tariff on the majority of EU goods. This is half the rate that was threatened. It also avoided a larger trade war between these two allies who account for nearly a third the global trade.

The U.S. Dollar Index held at a high of more than a week, making gold expensive for buyers who hold other currencies.

Investors await a series of macroeconomic data from the United States this week. These include inflation and employment figures, as well as the Federal Reserve’s two-day meeting that begins later that day. Expectations are for rates to remain unchanged.

Waterer stated that if weaker macroeconomic data in the U.S. or Trump's criticisms against the Fed lead the Fed to adopt a dovish tone next week, it could be a positive for gold.

Spot silver fell 0.2% to $38.10 an ounce. Platinum gained 0.5%, to $1.396.35, and palladium dropped 1.2%, to $1.231.55.

(source: Reuters)