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Gold set for weekly gain on US rate-cut optimism, geopolitical troubles

Gold prices were poised for a 2nd consecutive weekly gain on Friday, driven by safehaven demand in the middle of stress in the Middle East and increasing bets that the U.S. Federal Reserve may lower interest rates later on this year.

Spot gold was up 0.2% at $2,363.78 per ounce, as of 0756 GMT, after increasing more than 1% in the previous session.

Bullion has gained more than 1% so far in the week, including to its 1.7% increase last week.

U.S. gold futures increased 0.4% to $2,377.40 on the day.

In the short-term perspective, the existing movement chauffeur of this bullish going gold is mostly driven by rising geopolitical tensions, especially after the news on the attack on Gaza, said Kelvin Wong, a senior market expert for Asia Pacific at OANDA.

On Thursday, numerous Israeli air strikes in the Gaza Strip eliminated a minimum of 14 individuals and wounded dozens of others.

The marketplace is now trying to find what is the possibility of another (U.S.) rate cut after September, which might be supportive of gold, keeping it above that $2,300 level, stated Wong.

Data on Thursday showed newbie applications for U.S. welfare fell moderately recently, while brand-new real estate building and construction dropped. This, along with tepid retail sales last month, keeps the opportunity of a September rate cut on the table.

Lower interest rates reduce the chance cost of holding non-yielding bullion.

The marketplace's next focus is on the U.S. flash buying managers' indexes due at 0145 GMT.

While corrections are possible, the assistance level around $ 2,300 remains crucial for gold, with any considerable downturn likely influenced by shifts in financial indicators or abrupt market movements, ACY Securities expert Luca Santos stated.

Spot silver fell 1.1% to $30.38 per ounce, platinum was up 0.1% at $979.55 and palladium got 0.5%. to $927.81. All three metals were headed for weekly gains.

(source: Reuters)