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Gold slides over 1% as wider market thrashing spills over

Gold fell more than 1% on Monday, captured in the slipstream of a global, wider market selloff driven by mounting economic issues, although experts said this would be a short-term correction for the safe haven.

Area gold was down 1.6% at $2,403.39 an ounce by 11:58 a.m. ET (1558 GMT). U.S. gold futures lost 1% to $ 2,444.10.

Area silver was down 4.9% at $27.15.

Wall Street tumbled, as worries of the United States tipping into recession following weak financial data recently rippled through global markets.

Investors are scared and they're offering what they can, and that includes gold and silver, said Jim Wycoff, senior analyst at Kitco Metals.

The sell-off in autocatalysts platinum and palladium likewise shown deepening issues over industrial demand.

Platinum fell 4.4% to $916.05 and palladium lost 3.4% to $859.25 after striking its least expensive given that August 2018. The two metals are utilized in engine tires to lower emissions.

While gold is considered a safe haven during such uncertainties, it was not unsusceptible to Monday's sell-off as investors discarded possessions throughout the board.

Treasury bonds, meanwhile, remained in demand, with U.S. 10-year yields touching the most affordable because mid-2023 as fears of an economic crisis intensified after a bleak July payrolls report.

Nevertheless, analysts said gold, which has actually increased more than 16%. so far this year, could restore its footing looking ahead,. given the persistent financial and political unpredictabilities and. likewise on expectations of rate of interest cuts from the Federal. Reserve, which should bode well for the zero-yield bullion.

Markets were now expecting the reserve bank to cut by as. much as 50 basis points in the September meeting.

Raised geopolitical tensions and recent hopes for even. greater Fed rate cuts ought to produce encouraging conditions for. bullion. Eventually, gold needs to have the ability to post a brand-new record. high when nerves settle, stated Han Tan, primary market expert at. Exinity Group.

(source: Reuters)