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Rate cuts and global uncertainty are expected to boost gold prices for the third consecutive week.

Rate cuts and global uncertainty are expected to boost gold prices for the third consecutive week.

After three straight record highs, gold was set to gain for a third consecutive week on Friday. This was boosted by the Federal Reserve’s rate-cutting cues and the demand for safe havens amid geopolitical uncertainties and economic uncertainty.

As of 0235 GMT, spot gold was down 0.3% at $3,034.09 per ounce. Bullion rose to an all-time record of $3,057.21 for each ounce Thursday. It has gained about 2% this week.

U.S. Gold Futures remained at $3,042.60.

"I do not think that we need to wait for a specific trigger to make gold hit another record. Kyle Rodda, financial market analyst at Capital.com, said that all the fundamentals were in place for gold to continue trending upward.

I don't think there will be a correction in gold anytime soon. It is possible that gold will pull back into the $3,000s to recharge before continuing its uptrend.

As expected, the Fed kept its benchmark rate unchanged at 4.25% to 4.50% on Wednesday. Policymakers see the central bank delivering two quarter-percentage-point cuts by year-end.

Fed Chair Jerome Powell stated that the initial policies of U.S. president Donald Trump, which included extensive import tariffs on goods, appeared to have tipped the U.S. economic growth in a direction towards slower growth, and temporarily higher inflation.

Israel began bombing and ground operation in Gaza again on Thursday, effectively destroying a two-month old ceasefire.

Gold has reached 16 new highs in 2018, with four of them exceeding the $3,000 threshold.

Low interest rates are conducive to the non-yielding metal as a hedge against economic and geopolitical turmoil.

Silver spot fell by 0.8%, to $33.26 per ounce. Platinum lost 0.2%, to $983.10 and palladium dropped 0.5%, to $947.78. All three metals were on track to suffer weekly losses. (Reporting by Anjana Anil in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona and Sumana Nandy)

(source: Reuters)