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Gold rises on the back of safe-haven bid and weaker dollar

Gold prices rose on Thursday, as geopolitical tensions boosted demand for a "safe haven" asset, the U.S. Dollar weakened and anticipation of Federal Reserve rate cuts this year aided.

As of 11:32 am, spot gold rose 0.8%, to $4,874.94 an ounce. ET (16:32 GMT) after falling by nearly 1% in the earlier session. On Wednesday, the metal reached a new record high of $4,887.82.

U.S. Gold Futures for February Delivery increased by 0.8% to $4.877.20 an ounce.

The U.S. Dollar fell?0.4% versus rival currencies, making greenback priced bullion more appealing to overseas buyers.

Peter Grant, senior metals analyst at Zaner 'Metals, said that "geopolitical tensions and the generally weak dollar are factors that are part of the macro dedollarisation trend and are still impacting demand for gold".

U.S. president Donald Trump claimed he secured permanent U.S. access in Greenland through a deal with NATO. The head of the alliance said that allies must increase their commitment to Arctic Security to counter threats from Russia and China.

Details of the agreement were unclear, and Denmark refused to discuss its sovereignty over the islands.

The latest U.S. The Personal Consumption Expenditures report (PCE) showed that consumer spending increased in November and October, indicating a strong third quarter of growth.

Markets expect the U.S. Central Bank to implement two quarter-percentage-point rate cuts in later half of this year, increasing the appeal of non-yielding Gold.

"Short-term setbacks (for gold) will be viewed by many as 'buying opportunities. "We have seen the $5,000/oz near and beyond that Fibonacci project of $5,187.79/oz seems plausible," said Grant.

Silver spot was up 2.2% to $95.26 per ounce. This is near the record high set on Tuesday of $95.87.

The spot price of platinum increased 2.8%, to $2,551 an ounce. This is after it reached a record $2,558.20 per ounce earlier in the session. Palladium rose 1.2% to $1862.08.

(source: Reuters)