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Gold prices rise on risk-off sentiment ahead of Fed minutes and US jobs data

Gold prices rose Wednesday, as investors sought clues about the Federal Reserve’s interest rate path. They awaited the minutes of the Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting.

As of 0633 GMT, spot gold rose 0.5% to $4,089.59 an ounce. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery gained 0.6% per ounce to $4,090.30.

Investors are now awaiting the minutes of the Fed's most recent meeting. These will be released in the afternoon, along with the September non-farm employment report due on Thursday, after the U.S. shutdown.

The economists surveyed by expected the report to show employers adding 50,000 jobs in September.

The number of Americans who received unemployment benefits reached a two-month-high in mid-October, according to data released on Tuesday.

Tim Waterer, KCM Trade's Chief Market Analyst, said that the strong USD and uncertainty about the timing of the next Fed rate reduction has hampered gold's momentum.

Gold has been viewed by investors as a safe play due to a recent bout of risk aversion, which has helped limit the decline.

The dollar remained strong against its competitors. Gold becomes more expensive when the dollar is stronger.

The global equity markets have been in a downward spiral this week. The S&P 500 is on a 4-day losing streak due to concerns over the valuations of AI stock.

The U.S. Fed cut interest rates last month by 25 basis points. However, Chair Jerome Powell expressed caution about another rate reduction this year due in part to a lack of data.

CME Group’s FedWatch tool shows that traders now expect a rate reduction at the Fed’s meeting on December 9-10.

Gold that does not yield tends to perform well in low interest rate environments and times of economic uncertainty.

Other metals rose in price as well. Spot silver increased by 1.3%, to $51.33 an ounce. Platinum added 0.5%, to $1.542.17. Palladium increased 0.8%, to $1.411.86.

(source: Reuters)