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Gold recovers from a five-week low, but inflation worries cap gains

Gold prices rose on Tuesday after a five-week low was reached in the previous session. However, gains were modest as high crude oil prices kept inflation concerns alive and clouded U.S. rate outlook.

After a drop of more than 2% on Monday, spot gold was up 0.5% at $4,543.87 an ounce as of 0757 GMT. U.S. Gold Futures for?June Delivery were up 0.5% to $4,554.10.

Ilya Spivak is the head of global macro at Tastylive. He said that prices seem to have digested a little after the return of a 'war' trade across the markets on Monday.

The dollar and Treasury "yields" rose as the crude oil rebound fueled inflation fears. Spivak noted that this weighed against gold, which is non-interest bearing and anti-fiat.

Brent crude hovered at $113 per barrel, as the U.S. continued to negotiate a truce with Iran while exchanging blows in the Strait of Hormuz.

The U.S. Military said Monday that it destroyed six Iranian small vessels and intercepted Iranian drones and cruise missiles, as Tehran tried to thwart the new U.S. Naval effort to open up shipping through the Strait of Hormuz.

Dollar-priced materials become more expensive to holders of currencies other than the U.S. dollar.

Higher crude oil prices can also stoke the inflation and increase the probability of higher interest rates. Gold is considered an inflation hedge, but high interest rates can make other assets more appealing, which reduces its appeal.

Markets now see a 37% chance of an increase by March 2027 compared to 27% for a reduction one week ago.

Investors are now awaiting a number of important U.S. statistics this week, such as the ADP employment report and the April payrolls data.

Silver spot was up 0.8% to $73.29 an ounce. Platinum gained 1.7% at $1,978.77 and palladium increased 1.1% to 1,496.25. (Reporting and editing by Rashmi aich, Subhranshu Sahu, and Louise Heavens in Bengaluru)

(source: Reuters)