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Dubai Gold Trades at Discount to London due to Flight Disruptions

MUMBAI/LONDON, (Reuters) - Gold in Dubai is trading at a discount to London as flight constraints caused by the Middle East conflict keep more ​bullion in the local market, while demand remains subdued amid ‌uncertainty over the length of the war, analysts and traders said.

Flows of physical gold through Dubai — a major global trading hub supplying Switzerland, Hong Kong and India — have been ​disrupted for 10 days as the U.S.–Israeli war on Iran ​triggered widespread passenger flight cancellations across the Middle East.

"The market remains ⁠at a discount, but in thin trade the variation is wide, ​ranging from about $10 to $30 per troy ounce," said a Dubai-based bullion dealer.

Demand ​is weak both in India, a major bullion consumer, and the Middle East, while price volatility is prompting buyers to delay purchases, the dealer added.

Spot gold prices in London are down ​6% since the initial safe-haven spike at the start of the ​conflict on February 28. Bullion was last at $5,109 per troy ounce, while oil prices ‌soared.

"The ⁠known unknowns — conflict duration, escalation trajectory, and the macro inflation pass-through — remain unresolved," said Nicky Shiels, head of metals strategy at MKS PAMP, adding that gold was facing more volatility.

"Loco Dubai Gold trading at a discount ​to London is ​telling just as ⁠the 2011 Arab Spring saw steep discounts in the region," Shiels added.

The markets' response to the conflict in ​the Middle East has been less extreme than might ​have ⁠been thought, possibly implying that the consensus judgement is that the conflict will be short-lived, analysts at Heraeus said.

When Russia invaded Ukraine in February 2022, ⁠gold ​prices rallied for two weeks but later erased ​those gains, ending the year little changed as the broader sideways trend reasserted itself, the ​analysts added.

Reporting by Rajendra Jadhav and Polina Devitt; Editing by Diti Pujara

Source: Reuters


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