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Gold Heads for Weekly Gain, US-Iran Truce in Focus

  • Strait of Hormuz still shut and Lebanon fighting strains truce
  • US consumer prices surge as expected in March
  • Spot gold up over 2% this week

 

April 10 (Reuters) - Gold prices inched up on Friday and headed for a weekly ‌gain as the U.S. dollar weakened following the U.S.-Iran truce, though market participants continued to assess its durability and implications for interest rates.

Spot gold rose 0.3% to $4,778.89 per ounce as of 9:29 a.m. ​ET (1329 GMT). It has gained over 2% so far this week.

U.S. gold futures ​fell 0.3% to $4,804.00.

"Gold buyers are carefully reclaiming the narrative this week with ⁠higher lows every day helped by the tentative ceasefire. Expect a significant battle ahead ​of $5,000; a break back above could re-ignite the bull run," independent metals trader Tai Wong ​said.

The two-day-old ceasefire has halted a campaign of U.S. and Israeli air strikes on Iran, but it has yet to ease the blockade of the Strait of Hormuz or quell a parallel conflict between ​Israel and Iran's Hezbollah allies in Lebanon.

"As we've seen tensions in the Middle East ​de-escalate, there has been a little higher expectation of potentially seeing lower interest rates at some point, ‌and ⁠the dollar came under pressure," which has seen gold well supported, said David Meger, director of metals trading at High Ridge Futures.

The U.S. dollar was on track for a weekly drop, making greenback-priced gold cheaper for holders of other currencies.

Data showed that U.S. consumer prices ​increased by the most ​in nearly four ⁠years in March as the war boosted oil prices and the pass-through from tariffs persisted.

Persistently high inflation limits central banks’ ability to ​cut interest rates. While bullion is seen as a hedge against ​inflation and ⁠geopolitical uncertainty, its attractiveness fades in a high-rate environment due to the absence of yield.

Elsewhere, gold demand in India picked up slightly this week ahead of a key festival, although ⁠elevated prices ​weighed on sentiment, while premiums in China narrowed.

Among other ​metals, spot silver rose 1.7% to $76.34 per ounce, platinum lost 2.5% to $2,050.99, and palladium fell 2.5% to $1,518.66. All ​three metals headed for weekly gains.

Reporting by Ashitha Shivaprasad in Bengaluru; Editing by Nia Williams

Reporting by Ishaan Arora in Bengaluru; Editing by Barbara Lewis and Jan Harvey

Source: Reuters


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