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Gold demand falls as profit-taking and a softer geopolitical climate hit the safe-haven market

Gold fell on Thursday, as investors took profits after the "yellow metal" hit a record the previous session. A softer tone by U.S. president Donald Trump towards the Federal Reserve Chair and Iran also dampened the demand for safe havens. As of 0652 GMT, spot gold was down by 0.3% to $4,608.77 an ounce. Bullion reached a record $4,642.72 per ounce on Wednesday. U.S. Gold Futures for Delivery in February fell by 0.5% to $4613.0.

Ilya Spivak is the head of global macro for Tastylive. He said: "Today we are seeing that gold is down after (Trump said) maybe we won't intervene in Iran, staving off the safe-haven demands, but the bigger story (of metal's rising) will not go away." Iran's leaders, trying to quell the worst domestic unrest in Iran since the 1979 revolution, threatened U.S. bases in the area in an effort to dissuade Trump's repeated military threats. Trump, at the White House, suggested that he would be adopting a "wait-and-see" attitude toward the crisis. The president stated on Wednesday that, despite the Justice Department's criminal investigation into Powell, he does not plan to fire him. However, it is "too soon" to know what he will do in the end.

Later in the day the U.S. Weekly Jobless Claims for the First Week of January are released. This could give clues about the Fed's policy. The market expects two?interest rates cuts in 2019.

Gold is traditionally favored by non-yielding investments such as low interest rates, geopolitical unrest and economic uncertainty. Spot silver fell 3.4% to $89.63 an ounce, after reaching a session high of $93.57. Spot platinum fell 2.6% to $2.321.65 an ounce, after reaching a record high of $2.478.50 per ounce on December 29. Palladium fell 1.3% per ounce to $1,804.10 and was hovering near a week-low. Ishaan arora, Bengaluru. Sherry Jacob Phillips and Harikrishnan Nair edited the story.

(source: Reuters)