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Gold holds constant as geopolitical dangers counter rate cut issues

Gold rates held consistent on Tuesday, as safehaven need in the middle of continuous tensions in the Middle East offset rising expectations of less U.S. rate cuts this year.

Area gold was bit changed at $2,382.72 per ounce by 13:56 ET (1756 GMT).

U.S. gold futures settled 1% higher at $2,407.8.

The yellow metal touched an all-time high of $2,431.29 on Friday in anticipation of Iran's vindictive attack versus Israel.

Data revealed on Monday U.S. retail sales increased more than anticipated in March. The 10-year Treasury yields were up for the second consecutive day, making non-yielding bullion less appealing.

The market is in time out mode and waiting for the other shoe to drop on this Israeli-Iran conflict. You will see another rally in gold if the scenario escalates, said Jim Wyckoff, senior analyst at Kitco Metals.

If the Middle East dispute de-escalates, market focus will turn to the Fed. It has actually become apparent that Fed is not going to be able to cut rates quickly, which is a bearish component for gold and silver markets.

Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell informed a U.S. Senate panel simply over five weeks ago the Fed was not far from getting self-confidence in inflation falling to the level required to cut rate of interest but policymakers, investors and outside experts have actually lost a bit of faith because outlook due to a series of strong economic data.

Deutsche Bank projections gold costs at $2,400 per ounce by year-end and at $2,600 in December 2025.

We think gold is likely to remain on a strong footing as any profit-taking by early financiers would be changed by financial investment from those who have up until now not participated in the move, however agree philosophically with its instructions, the bank included a note.

Area silver fell 2.4% to $28.17 per ounce, platinum reduced 1.2% to $958.03 and palladium was down 2.3%. to $1,012.00.

(source: Reuters)