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Decreased geopolitical threats press gold to a more than 2-week low

Gold prices fell to a more than twoweek low on Tuesday as easing issues of an escalation in the Middle East crisis set off profittaking after a recent rally.

Area gold fell 1.0% to $2,303.59 per ounce by 1203 GMT. Gold, silver and palladium touched their lowest because April 5 earlier in the session, while platinum struck a three-week low.

Gold's aggressive rally since the mid-February low is currently being challenged with bullion suffering a long past due and reasonably aggressive, but healthy correction, Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said.

Gold dipped 2.7% on Monday, which was its most significant intraday fall in 22 months. Its March-April rally drove the valuable metal up by practically $400 to an all-time high of $2,431.29 on April 12.

The correction will help identify the genuine level of underlying demand besides momentum and managed cash accounts ... and will reduce longs should the technical and/or fundamental picture modification, Hansen said.

From a technical viewpoint, the key area of support for gold utilizing Fibonacci retracement levels stands at around $ 2,255-2,260.

Meanwhile, two vital areas of gold demand - purchases by central banks and physical demand in leading customer China - remain company and continue offering support to the precious metal.

In another helpful factor, global physically-backed gold exchange traded funds saw first weekly net inflows because the end of 2023 recently as increasing holdings in the The United States and Canada and Asia balanced out outflows in Europe, according to the World Gold Council.

Under pressure from gold's correction, spot silver fell 0.8% to $26.99 per ounce. The gold-silver ratio << XAU-XAG >. rose to 85 ounces of silver to an ounce of gold from 82.5 in. mid-April.

Platinum dipped 1.2% to $905.90, and palladium. dropped 1.4% to $995.00 as they followed gold and were likewise. under pressure from increasing market share of electric lorries.

More than one in five automobiles offered internationally is set to be. electric in 2024, the International Energy Company stated on. Tuesday.

(source: Reuters)