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Gold prices continue to fall as dollar firms and investors make profits

Gold prices continue to fall as dollar firms and investors make profits

The gold prices continued to decline on Wednesday after their steepest daily drop since 2020 the previous session. An initial recovery was followed by renewed selling as investors locked in profits, and a stronger US dollar added pressure.

As of 0941 GMT the spot gold price was down by 1.4%, at $4,067.31, after having risen as high as $4,161.17 in earlier sessions. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery fell 0.7%, to $4.081.30 an ounce.

Dollar-priced gold became more expensive as the U.S. index of dollar hovered at a high for a week.

Bullion prices dropped 5.3% on the day after hitting a record-high of $4,381.21 during the previous session. Prices are up 54% this year due to geopolitical instability and economic uncertainty, U.S. interest rate expectations and strong ETF inflows.

The analyst at ActivTrades, Ricardo Evangelista, said that the recent gains in gold prices were a sign that they had reached an overbought level. This led to many traders closing their positions to lock in profits.

The 21-day moving median at $4,005 is a technical support for gold.

Investors await the U.S. Consumer Price Index report (CPI), due on Friday. This could provide insight into the Federal Reserve’s rate-cutting trajectory. In low-interest-rate environments, gold, which is a non-yielding investment, tends do well.

According to a poll of economists, the Fed is expected to lower its key rate by 25 basis points next week and then again in December.

A planned summit between U.S. president Donald Trump and his Russian equivalent Vladimir Putin has been put on hold, and uncertainty surrounds a potential meeting between Trump and Chinese president Xi Jinping.

StoneX analyst Rhona OConnel said: "We're still in a period of uncertainty, which will likely lead to a new interest for buying at any significant dips."

Silver spot increased 0.9% to $48,28 an ounce. On Tuesday, it fell 7.1%.

Palladium fell 1%, to $1,394.52, while platinum dropped 0.1%, to $1,549.53. (Reporting from Anmol Choubey in Bengaluru and Sherin Varghese, with additional reporting by Polina Devitt; editing by Sherry Phillips and Shailesh Kumar)

(source: Reuters)