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Gold rises on US rate-cut expectations; US-China Trade Talks in Focus

Gold rises on US rate-cut expectations; US-China Trade Talks in Focus

Gold prices rose on Monday as investors looked forward to U.S. inflation figures and U.S. China trade negotiations later this week.

As of 0331 GMT, spot gold was up by 0.1%, at $4,253.33 an ounce. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery climbed 1.3%, to $4266.30 per ounce.

Silver spot rose by 0.5%, to $52.12 an ounce. After hitting a record-high of $54.47 earlier that day, prices fell by about 4.4% in their worst session in early April.

The gold market is still trying to get its bearings after the Friday selloff. After a few weeks' mania, the sentiment is cooling off a little, said Capital.com analyst Kyle Rodda.

Gold prices fell by 1.8% Friday, the highest since mid-May after U.S. president Donald Trump announced that his 100% tariffs on Chinese goods would not be sustainable.

He said he was going to meet Chinese President Xi Jinping, and that he believed things would go well with China.

The next major hurdles will be the U.S. China talks this week, and the CPI release from the United States on the Friday. The absence of economic data has created a vacuum that, I believe, is responsible for the surge in gold price.

The Federal Reserve is not expected to push back against the pricing of rate cuts. This will be revealed in figures due on Friday.

According to CME FedWatch Tool, the markets are pricing in a quarter point Fed rate reduction this month and another in December.

The non-yielding gold has gained over 60% in the past year, reaching a record high of $4378.69 last Friday. This was due to geopolitical tensions and aggressive bets on rate cuts, central bank purchases, de-dollarisation, and strong exchange-traded funds.

Palladium rose 0.2% and platinum dropped 0.8%, respectively, to $1.476.97 an ounce. (Reporting and editing by Sherry Jacobi-Phillips, Subhranshu Saghu and Swati verma from Bengaluru.

(source: Reuters)