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Gold prices rebound after Iran and US agree to outline ceasefire agreement

Gold prices rose over 1% on Thursday after hitting a two-month low earlier in the session. The U.S. Dollar and oil prices also eased as a result of the news that Iran and the U.S. had agreed to a ceasefire agreement.

Gold spot was up 1.1% to $4,504.07 an ounce at 1:31 pm EDT (1731 GMT) after it fell to its lowest price since late March.

U.S. Gold Futures closed 1.1% higher, at $4,532.40.

According to a source with knowledge of the situation, the U.S. and Iran have reached an agreement on a 60 day ceasefire extension. However, President Donald Trump still has to approve it.

The U.S. Dollar index fell by 0.2%, which made greenback-priced gold cheaper for overseas purchasers. Brent prices fell after the report.

In line with expectations, the U.S. Personal Consumption Expenditures Price Index rose?3.8% over the 12-month period ending in April. PCE prices rose 0.4% in April after rising 0.7% in march.

The trading gods appear to be intervening today in gold. Tai Wong, an independent metals trader, said that the PCE's weakness and reports of a deal imminently opening Hormuz have given gold a much needed reprieve.

Gold was on the verge of dropping below the 200-day-moving average early this morning, which many traders and investors deem a litmus test to maintain an uptrend.

Bart Melek is the global head of commodity strategies at TD Securities. He said that the PCE data indicates that Federal Reserve could hold rates instead of pursuing a?further tightening.

The minutes of the Fed's meeting on April 28-29, published last week, showed that a growing number officials were open to the idea that they might need to increase?rates.

Since the U.S. and Israeli?conflict began with Iran late in February, the price of gold has been under pressure due to inflation fears. Bullion, despite its appeal as a safe haven, underperforms in times of rising interest rates, when investors gravitate towards yield-bearing investments.

Data showed that China's net gold imports via Hong Kong increased 81.2% from the previous month.

Spot silver rose 1.3% to $75.60, while platinum remained steady at $1.918.95. Palladium fell 1.4% to $1371.52. Ashitha shivaprasad reported from Bengaluru, with additional reporting by Anjana Anil. Devika Syamnath and Dita Pujara edited the article.

(source: Reuters)