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Oil falls ahead of inflation data, gold gains as dollar weakens

Gold rose on Tuesday, rebounding from its two-month low. A weaker dollar, falling oil prices, and investors evaluating Middle East peace prospects before key inflation data, all contributed to the rise.

As of 9:05 am, spot gold was up 0.2% at $4,338.69 an ounce. ET (1305 GMT). It fell to its lowest levels since March 23 during the previous session.

U.S. Gold Futures for August Delivery remained at $4,363.90.

Dollars are now cheaper for those who hold other currencies.

Fawad Rasaqzada is a market analyst at Forex.com. He said: "We have seen some weakness in the oil price... While gold has pulledback recently, it appears that the uptick was largely driven?by short-covering."

The Middle East is showing signs of a possible deal. Oil prices dropped after Iran and Israel announced that they had stopped their attacks against each other in response to an appeal by U.S. president Donald Trump.

Lower oil prices may ease inflation concerns, allowing central banks to cut interest rates and increasing the appeal of non-yielding metals.

The focus this week has shifted from the strong jobs numbers of last week to the key inflation data, such as the U.S. Consumer Price Index 'print for May on Wednesday, and the Producer Price Index'readout on Thursday. The outlook for monetary policy.

If the U.S. Inflation data for May surprise to the upside again on Wednesday, then the gold price will likely fall even further. The?potential of a recovery in the second half of the year is also increased if, as expected, the Fed does not raise interest rates.

According to CME FedWatch, traders are "pricing" in a 70% chance of a Fed rate increase in December.

Silver spot rose by 0.7%, to $68.61 an ounce. Platinum rose 1.4%, to $1778.98. Palladium rose 3.8%, to $1251.05. (Reporting by Anushree Mukherjee in Bengaluru; Editing by Shilpi Majumdar)

(source: Reuters)