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Gold prices ease as US job data boosts the dollar; Trump's tone towards Iran is softer

Gold prices fell on Wednesday, as the dollar rose on the back of weaker than expected weekly U.S. jobless claims data. Meanwhile, President Donald Trump’s moderate tone towards Iran further dampened demand for gold. As of 11:10 am, spot gold was down by 0.1%, at $4,614.97 an ounce. ET (1610 GMT). On Wednesday, gold reached a new record of $4,642.72. U.S. Gold Futures for Delivery in February fell by 0.3% to $4 619.80.

The dollar index rose to its highest level in December 2012 and made bullion more costly for overseas buyers.

"Recent data keeps expectations of a Fed on pause - perhaps for the first half year. The dollar index has reached a multiweek high, and this is causing a bit of a headwind to gold," said Peter Grant. Trump stated on Wednesday that he does not plan to fire Jerome Powell, despite the Justice Department's criminal investigation of the Federal Reserve Chair. However, it is "too soon" to predict what he will do. It is widely expected that the Federal Reserve will maintain interest rates during its meeting on January 27-28, despite Trump’s calls for reductions. The markets, however, expect at least two 25-basis point rate cuts later this year. Trump said that he was told the killings of Iranian protesters appeared to be decreasing. He also saw no immediate plans for large-scale murders.

Grant said that easing geopolitical concerns had slightly weighed down on gold prices. However, he viewed the move in gold as a corrective one and expected traders would treat any dips as "buying opportunities".

Gold is a safe-haven asset that tends to perform well in times of geopolitical or economic uncertainty as well as low interest rate environments.

Adam Glapinski, the governor of Poland's central banks, said that by 2025 they will have 550 tons gold and that they want to increase their reserves to 700 tonnes.

Silver spot fell 2.4%, to $90.56 an ounce. It had earlier reached a session high of $93.57.

Palladium fell 2.8%, to $1,789.68 an ounce. Spot platinum declined 0.5%, to $2,372.75 an ounce. (Reporting and editing by Sharon Singleton in Bengaluru, Anmol Choubey)

(source: Reuters)