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Middle East turmoil sets gold on track to 5th straight weekly gain

Gold prices increased on Friday and were poised for a 5th straight week of gains, as investors hurried to the safehaven property as escalating stress between Iran and Israel fuelled fears of a larger local dispute.

Area gold was up 0.1% at $2,380.68 per ounce since 1040 GMT, after rising to as high as $2,417.59 earlier in the session. Rates were up over 1% this week.

U.S. gold futures rose 0.1% at $2,396.60.

Surges echoed over an Iranian city on Friday in what sources referred to as an Israeli attack, however Tehran played down the occurrence and indicated it had no plans for retaliation.

The geopolitical scenario with retaliation of Iran and the newest attack in the Iranian state has actually raised the risk that the conflict will escalate and is assisting safe-haven gold, stated Quantitative Commodity Research analyst Peter Fertig.

On The Other Hand, U.S. Federal Reserve policymakers have actually coalesced around the idea that there is no urgency to cut rate of interest, given the slow development on inflation and a resistant U.S. economy.

Commerzbank said in a note that it anticipates gold to end the year at $2,300 compared to $2,200 formerly, although it remains sceptical about the additional upside potential as gold's. increase runs counter to the pattern in U.S. rate expectations.

Greater rate of interest reduce the appeal of holding. non-yielding bullion.

Gold, which has notched strong gains this year, will rise. further on robust Chinese demand outlook and macro. uncertainties, Chinese state-backed research house Antaike said.

Spot silver rose 0.1% to $28.25 per ounce and was. up 1.4% for the week.

Silver is set to surpass gold as its less expensive rate and. strong principles are most likely to see more investment demand,. ANZ stated in a note.

Area platinum fell 0.3% to $932.40, and palladium. slipped 2% to $1,002.50. Both metals were headed for. weekly declines.

(source: Reuters)