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Gold strikes record high for eighth session in a row

Gold costs hit a record high up on Tuesday for an eighth consecutive session on geopolitical worries and assistance from momentumfollowing funds.

Spot gold was up 0.7% to $2,354.37 per ounce by 1158 GMT after hitting a record high of $2,365.09.

Strong underlying momentum with the buy-on-dip still the prevailing method among traders, Ole Hansen, head of product strategy at Saxo Bank, stated.

Geopolitical threats associated with Russia/Ukraine and the Middle East are still playing a supporting function ... the focus is changing from the unfavorable impact of lower rate cut expectations towards greater and sticky inflation.

The market is waiting for the Federal Reserve's policy conference minutes and U.S. inflation information due on Wednesday for fresh signals on the rate of interest path.

Elevated rates of interest usually constrain the appeal of holding non-yielding gold, however the precious metal has actually been disregarding these aspects so far this month.

From the technical perspective, the April rally moved area gold costs deep into overbought territory, as indicated by the relative strength index.

Area silver rose 0.8% to $28.05 per ounce after hitting $28.18, the highest given that June 2021.

Silver is attempting, for a second day, to get a grip above $28. If effective, gold may enjoy some additional tailwind, Hansen included.

Bank of America experts expect gold to average $2,500 by the 4th quarter, potentially striking $3,000 by 2025. Silver would benefit from that and stronger commercial need taking it to more than $30 per ounce within the next 12 months.

Demand from central banks and China's retail purchasers has been strong. If Western financiers join the celebration on rate cuts, the yellow metal will move a leg greater, BofA analysts said, adding that gold could rise further.

Platinum acquired 2.0% to $977.33 and palladium increased 1.5% to $1,058.93. Palladium rates, according to BofA, are set to pattern below underperforming platinum in the longer term as need is controlled by car drivers.

(source: Reuters)