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Gold recovers from a five-week low, but inflation worries cap gains

Gold prices rose on Tuesday, but gains were modest as crude oil prices remained high and inflation fears remained alive.

After a drop of more than 2% on Monday, spot gold increased 0.3% by 0417 GMT to $4,533.40 an ounce. U.S. gold futures for delivery in June rose 0.2% to $4,542.50.

Ilya Spirak, the head of global macro at Tastylive, said that prices seem to have digested a little after the return of "war trade" across markets on Monday.

Gains were however capped by the rise in Treasury "yields" and the dollar as an increase in crude oil stoked inflation concerns. Spivak stated that this weighed against gold, which is non-interest bearing and anti-fiat.

Brent crude was hovering?above $113 per barrel, as the U.S. continued to negotiate a truce with Iran while exchanging blows in the Strait of Hormuz.

The U.S. Military said Monday that it destroyed six Iranian small vessels and intercepted Iranian drones and cruise missiles, as Tehran tried to thwart the new U.S. Naval effort to?open shipping through Strait of Hormuz.

Dollar-priced materials become more expensive to holders of currencies other than the U.S. dollar.

While higher crude oil prices can increase inflation, they also increase the probability of higher interest rates. Gold is a good inflation hedge but high interest rates can make other assets more appealing.

Markets now see a 37% chance that the U.S. interest rate will increase by March 2027 compared to 27% a week ago.

Investors are now awaiting a number of important U.S. data this week. These include job openings, the ADP employment report and April payrolls.

Silver spot was unchanged at $72.73, platinum rose 1% to $1964, and palladium gained 0.8%, reaching $1,492.27. (Reporting and editing by Rashmi aich and Subhranshu Sahu in Bengaluru.

(source: Reuters)