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Gold drops as investors wait for Fed's Jackson Hole Conference

Gold drops as investors wait for Fed's Jackson Hole Conference

Gold prices fell on Tuesday, as the U.S. Dollar strengthened. Investors remained tense in anticipation of Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell’s speech to be delivered at Jackson Hole this week.

By 11:40 am, spot gold had fallen 0.1% per ounce to $3325.74. ET (1535 GMT). Earlier in the session, the contract reached its lowest level since 1 August.

U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery fell by 0.3% to $3369.60.

The benchmark 10-year yields fell, but the dollar index pared its losses and remained steady.

Jim Wyckoff is a senior analyst with Kitco Metals. He said that "generally, (traders) are positioning on the futures markets ahead of the Jackson Hole Meeting... It's going be pretty quiet until then." Fed chair Jerome Powell is scheduled to give a speech on Friday about the central bank's policies and economic outlook. The Federal Reserve will hold its annual conference in Jackson Hole this week. U.S. president Donald Trump continues to call on the Federal Reserve to cut rates further.

Wyckoff stated, "My feeling is that (Powell), might lean just a bit more dovish... which would be good for the gold and silver price."

Gold that does not yield, which is traditionally a hedge in times of uncertainty, tends to do well when interest rates are low.

According to CME's FedWatch, traders see an 83% probability of a Fed rate reduction of 25 basis points in September. Trump also said that he was hoping Vladimir Putin, the Russian president, would end the war in Ukraine.

The minutes of the Federal Reserve meeting held in July, which are set to be published on Wednesday, will shed light on U.S. economy outlook.

UBS raised its gold target price for the end of March 2026 from $3,600 to $3,600 due to persistent macroeconomic risks in the United States, a drop in dollar usage, and strong demand.

Other than that, silver spot fell by 1.4%, to $37.49 an ounce. Platinum was unchanged at $1,322.85, and palladium dropped 1%, to $1,111.76. (Reporting from Noel John, Bengaluru. Editing by Sharon Singleton & Sahal Muhammed.

(source: Reuters)