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Investors cash out as gold rally slows down, dollar edge higher

Gold prices fell on Wednesday. They were dragged down by a rebounding dollar and profit booking after bullion had risen to a three-week-high in the previous session, on the expectation of Federal Reserve interest rate reductions next month.

As of 0421 GMT spot gold was down by 0.5% to $4,107.41 an ounce after reaching its highest level since October 23. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery edged down 0.1% to $4,113.80 an ounce.

Tim Waterer, KCM Trade's Chief Market Analyst, said that the dollar's decline has helped gold and silver. Both metals have seen gains in this week.

Gold is trading above $4,100, and the precious metal will continue to move higher if U.S. macroeconomic data continues to support additional monetary policy ease.

The dollar index edged up 0.1% against its rivals, and was on track to snap a five-session losing streak. This made gold less appealing for holders of other currencies.

The U.S. Senate approved a deal Monday to restore funding for the federal government after a record-long shut down that affected millions of food benefits, caused hundreds of thousands of federal employees not to be paid, snarled up air traffic and delayed the release economic data from the government.

According to CME's FedWatch, traders are now pricing in an approximately 68% chance that the U.S. Central Bank will reduce rates by 25 basis point next month. This is up from 64% the previous session.

Gold that does not yield tends to perform well when interest rates are low and economic uncertainty is present.

Fed Governor Stephen Miran stated on Monday that a rate cut of 50 basis points would be appropriate in December. He noted that the inflation rate was falling, while the unemployment rate was rising.

SPDR Gold Trust is the largest gold-backed ETF in the world. Its holdings increased 0.41% on Tuesday to 1,046.36 tons from 1,042.06 tonnes on Monday.

Other than that, silver spot fell by 0.4%, to $51.05 an ounce. Platinum dropped 0.4%, to $1.578.95, and palladium was down nearly 1%, to $1.431.47.

(source: Reuters)