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Gold, Silver Futures Drop As Fed Minutes, Strong Dollar Weigh On Safe-Haven Asset

Gold and silver prices declined in the futures trade on Thursday as investors trimmed their positions after the US Federal Reserve's latest meeting minutes signalled continued caution over rate cuts

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Gold and silver Freepik

 Gold and silver prices declined in the futures trade on Thursday as investors trimmed their positions after the US Federal Reserve's latest meeting minutes signalled continued caution over rate cuts.

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On the Multi Commodity Exchange (MCX), gold futures for December delivery declined by ₹511, or 0.42%, to ₹1,22,540 per 10 grams in a business turnover of 10,456 lots.

Silver futures were also under pressure, with the white metal for December delivery falling by ₹411, or 0.26%, to ₹1,54,696 per kg in 12,309 lots.

"Gold prices pared gains after the release of the Federal Reserve's latest meeting minutes, with market participants keeping an eye on update regarding Japan and economic data points which is again being delayed," Manav Modi, Analyst – Precious Metal -Research, Motilal Oswal Financial Services, said.

Federal Reserve officials, during the October meeting, were divided over cutting interest rates, minutes released on Wednesday showed. Fed Chair Jerome Powell reinforced a cautious tone, stating that a December rate cut is not a "foregone conclusion".

On the global front, Comex gold futures for December delivery slipped by USD 23.54, or 0.58%, to USD 4,059.26 per ounce.

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Manav Modi noted that a sharply lower US trade deficit and reduced rate-cut expectations have strengthened the Dollar Index back toward the 100 mark, limiting bullion's upside.

Meanwhile, the dollar index, which gauges the greenback's strength against a basket of six currencies, was trading flat at 100.20.

Comex silver futures for December delivery fell by 0.57% to USD 50.56 per ounce.

"Markets uncertainty intensified after the US Bureau of Labor Statistics unexpectedly cancelled the October employment report, sharply reducing December rate-cut odds from 50% to 30% and injecting further volatility into the macro landscape," Modi added. 

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