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Gold falls over 3% after hawkish Fed remarks spark market sell-off

Gold prices fell more than 3% Friday, as a result of a wider market sell-off sparked off by hawkish comments from U.S. Federal Reserve officials. This lowered hopes for an interest rate reduction in December.

As of 9:02 am, spot gold was down 3.1% at $4,041.01 an ounce. ET (1153 GMT). The bullion price is still up 1.4% this week.

U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery fell 3.6% to $ 4,043.10 an ounce.

David Meger is the director of metals at High Ridge Futures. He said that the idea that there will be a lower likelihood of a Fed cut in December has taken some of the wind from the silver and gold markets.

The equity markets fell after the global selloff caused by Fed hawkish signals.

The Fed and traders are now in the dark ahead of the next policy meeting due to a data gap created by Thursday's end of the longest U.S. shutdown.

Investors were hoping that fresh data would indicate a slowing of the economy, giving the Fed the room to reduce rates in December. This would boost the appeal for non-yielding metals like gold.

These expectations were dimmed when more Fed policymakers took a cautious approach to additional monetary ease.

The FedWatch tool of CME Group showed that market expectations of a 25 basis point rate cut in January fell from 64% to 53% earlier this week.

Gold that does not yield a return tends to do well in periods of economic instability and low interest rates.

When margin calls or liquidations occur, traders will close all positions to release margin. In this environment of risk-off, even gold prices are down. This is partly explained by Fawad Rasaqzada's note, a market analyst for City Index and FOREX.com.

The demand for physical gold in major Asian markets has been subdued over the past week.

Silver spot fell 3.7%, to $50.38 an ounce, but is still on course for a gain of 4.6% per week.

Palladium fell 3.3% and platinum dropped 3.6%, to $1,379.18. (Reporting and editing by Noel John in Bengaluru, Pablo Sinha from Mumbai; Leroy Leo).

(source: Reuters)