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Gold holds steady as focus turns to U.S. economic information

Gold costs steadied on Tuesday after striking a more than two-week short on lessening fears about an escalation of tensions in the Middle East, with investors awaiting secret economic information for further clearness on the timeline on U.S. rate of interest cuts.

Area gold was little changed at $2,325.80 per ounce by 1:40 p.m. ET (1740 GMT) after earlier hitting its least expensive given that April 5. Bullion's March to April rally drove it up by nearly $400 to an all-time high of $2,431.29 on April 12.

U.S. gold futures settled 0.2% lower at $ 2,342.10.

Israeli strikes intensified throughout Gaza in a few of the heaviest shelling in weeks, however with fears of a broader dispute receding after Iran stated last week it had no plan to strike back following an evident Israeli drone attack, monetary markets revealed signs of sharper appetite for threat.

That has suggested gold, generally seen as a sanctuary from danger, has actually lost ground, stated Julia Khandoshko, CEO at European broker Mind Money.

The market is also carefully monitoring signals from the U.S., where inflation data and declarations from the Federal Reserve indicate that interest rates may not be cut in June, Khandoshko stated.

Recent remarks from Fed authorities hinted at no urgency to cut rates, decreasing the appeal of non-interest paying bullion. Traders now anticipate the first Fed rate cut to come most likely in September.

The market will keep a tab on U.S. GDP information due on Thursday and the Personal Consumption Expenses (PCE) print on Friday for more ideas on the health of the economy and the timing of cuts.

Khandoshko included that overbought gold was also witnessing a. technical correction.

There are many financiers who have actually lost out on the big. rally in gold and will be aiming to pick up dips like these,. said Fawad Razaqzada, market analyst at City Index.

In other places, area silver increased 0.4% to $27.29. Autocatalyst metal platinum dipped 0.5% to $912.75, while. palladium got 1.1% to $1,020.12.

(source: Reuters)