Gold Fell to its Lowest in Seven Weeks

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Gold fell to its lowest in seven weeks on Tuesday after strong U.S. economic data reinforced expectations of another interest rate rise in the United States this year and pushed the dollar and U.S. bond yields higher.

The CME's Fedwatch indicator showed markets were pricing in a 77 percent likelihood of a December rate rise after U.S.
manufacturing activity surged. World stocks also rose to new record highs as a positive global growth outlook encouraged investment in riskier assets.

A strong dollar makes gold more expensive for holders of other currencies, potentially undermining their desire to buy,
while higher bond yields reduce the appeal of non-yielding gold.

Higher interest rates meanwhile push bond yields higher and tend to boost the dollar.  Spot gold was flat at $1,270.70 an ounce at 1012 GMT. It earlier touched $1,267.76, the lowest since Aug. 15 and down more than 6 percent from a one-year high of $1,357.54 in early September.

U.S. gold futures for December delivery were 0.2 percent lower at $1,273.80 an ounce. "The factors that pushed gold toward $1,360 in early September are now reversing," Julius Baer analyst Carsten Menke said.

"The U.S. dollar and yields have rebounded from their recent lows and it looks like positioning in the gold futures market is
somewhat reversing, with some long covering and new shorts." The net long position of hedge funds and money managers in
COMEX gold rose nine-fold in the two months to mid-September, helping push prices higher, but has since fallen sharply.

Menke said he expected a strengthening dollar and normalisation of speculative positioning to push gold to $1,200 an ounce by the end of the year.  Prices have also been supported by purchases of...

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