(Reuters) - Gold prices eased on Friday after touching their lowest in over five months the session before, dragged down by a stronger U.S. dollar and after Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen bolstered the case for raising interest rates next month.
FUNDAMENTALS
* Spot gold > had slipped 0.2 percent to $1,213.75 an ounce by 0036 GMT. In the previous session, it marked its lowest since June 3 at $1,210.73, remaining on track for its second straight weekly decline.
* U.S. gold futures
* The dollar rose to a 13-1/2-year high against a basket of currencies <.DXY> on Thursday as the bond market resumed its sell-off on growing certainty of a U.S. interest rate increase in December. [USD/]
* The election of Donald Trump as U.S. president has done nothing to change the Fed's plans for a rate increase "relatively soon", the Fed's Yellen said on Thursday in Congressional testimony.
More From This Section
* U.S. consumer prices recorded their biggest increase in six months in October on rising gasoline costs and rents.
* The U.S. economy is on track to grow at a 3.6 percent annualised pace in the fourth quarter after data showed domestic housing starts hit a nine-year high in October, the Atlanta Fed's GDP Now forecast model showed on Thursday.
* European Central Bank interest rates may be close to bottoming out but it is still premature to talk about reducing economic stimulus given the risk of acting too early, said ECB Executive Board member Yves Mersch.
* The Bank of Japan on Thursday fired a warning shot to markets by offering to buy unlimited bonds for the first time under a revamped policy framework, as domestic debt yields surged in the wake of Trump's upset U.S. election victory.
* SPDR Gold Trust
* For the top stories on metals and other news, click [TOP/MTL] or [GOL]
(Reporting by Apeksha Nair in Bengaluru; Editing by Joseph Radford)
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