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Gold falls as US rekindle taper fears

London - Gold dropped 1.7% on Friday, on track for its biggest one-day fall in more than a month, as surprisingly strong US jobs data raised the prospect that the Federal Reserve may soon decide to temper its bond-buying stimulus.

A flurry of sell orders in heavy volume sent US gold futures over $10 lower just minutes after the October nonfarm payroll data, setting a weaker tone for the rest of the day. A similar move in gold futures was also seen after Thursday's strong GDP report.

Rallying US equities and a soaring U.S. dollar sent gold to a three-week low, as bullion underperformed silver and platinum group metals. The S&P 500 index was up 0.8% on better economic hopes, while the dollar index rose 0.6%.  

US job growth unexpectedly accelerated in October, with employers adding 204 000 new jobs, and 60 000 more jobs were created in September and August than previously reported, the Labour Department said.

"Those payroll numbers made the folks who buy gold nervous as they did not go in the direction they wanted to see, suggesting that tapering could be back on the table," said Axel Merk, chief investment officer at California-based Merk Funds, which have $450m assets under management.

Spot gold was down 1.7% at $1 285.20 an ounce by 11:17 EDT (16: 17 GMT). The metal is on track to fall 2.2% for the week, its second consecutive weekly loss.

US Comex gold futures for December fell $23 to $1 285.50 an ounce, with trading volume on track to finish in line with its 250-day average, preliminary Reuters data showed.

Gold has lost about a fifth of its value this year due to fears the Fed would begin cutting back its $85bn monthly bond purchases. The metal's inflation-hedge appeal has been burnished by the bond purchases and low interest rates.

"At the moment, the market is looking at underlying growth and can see how the US is accelerating and that very simply leads to tapering one way or another, which is obviously not bullish for gold," BofA Merrill Lynch analyst Michael Widmer said.

The metal had managed a rebound in recent weeks after a prolonged budget battle in Washington in October led investors to believe the Fed may not start withdrawing support for the economy and possibly push the tapering into next year.

However, after Friday's strong gain in employment, some economists said it would be unwise to rule out chances the Fed could curtail its bond-buying as soon as its next meeting in December.

Among other precious metals, silver was down 1.5% at $21.31 an ounce. Platinum fell 0.8% to $1 436.74 an ounce, while palladium dropped 0.4% to $755.47 an ounce.

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Rand - Dollar
19.21
-0.5%
Rand - Pound
23.95
-0.7%
Rand - Euro
20.56
-0.5%
Rand - Aus dollar
12.48
-0.7%
Rand - Yen
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Platinum
912.40
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Palladium
1,005.00
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