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Gold poised to lose 1% in a week as US jobs data dampens rate-cutting hopes

Gold prices dropped more than 1% Friday, and are set to fall for the week after a strong U.S. employment report dampened expectations that the Federal Reserve will cut rates next month. This weighed on non-yielding gold.

As of 0909 GMT spot gold was down 0.7% at $4,047.14 an ounce after having fallen more than 1% in the previous session. Bullion prices have fallen 0.5% in the last week.

U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery fell by 0.4% to $4.044.50 an ounce.

The prospect of more rate cuts is somewhat doomed due to the good labour market data released yesterday. Nitesh Sha, commodities strategist at WisdomTree, believes that this is the main factor weighing down on gold.

MIXED VIEW OF US LABOUR MARKET

The delayed U.S. job report on Thursday revealed a mixed picture of the labour markets. Non-farm payrolls increased by 119,000, compared to estimates of 50,000. However, the unemployment rate reached a four-year-high.

The next jobs report will be released only after the Fed meeting in December, where traders see a reduced chance of a cut to rates, from 44% last Friday.

In low-interest rate environments, gold, which is a non-yielding investment, does well.

Beth Hammack of the Cleveland Fed, who was opposed to the Fed's latest rate cut, warned on Thursday against further lowering borrowing rates due to inflation.

The physical gold market in major Asian markets has remained low this week due to the volatility of rates. This deterred buyers from purchasing.

FUNDAMENTALS IN ACT

ANZ stated in a report that the fundamentals of gold remained unchanged. "Factors such as slower economic growth, expensive stock market valuations, geopolitical uncertainties, and diversification from U.S.-based assets are likely sustain robust investment demand, and central bank buying," ANZ noted.

"I think that we are currently at the bottom of the gold price. "Prices may temporarily go lower, but the overall path will be upwards in the coming months," WisdomTree’s Shah said.

Other than that, silver fell 2.1% per ounce to $49.55, platinum increased 0.2% at $1,515.25, while palladium dropped 0.2% at $1,375. (Reporting and editing by Alex Richardson in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)