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Gold eyes weekly gains as geopolitical uncertainty improves appeal

Gold costs eased on Friday however was on track for a weekly gain, as financiers looked for the safehaven metal in the middle of rising geopolitical tensions, while palladium was poised for its greatest week in more than a month.

Area gold slipped 0.2% at $2,730.09 per ounce, as of 01:55 GMT. Prices struck a record high of $2,758.37 on Wednesday and got 0.4% up until now in the week.

U.S. gold futures fell 0.2% to $2,742.80.

Israeli strike killed at least 17 people at a school in central Gaza. U.S. and Israeli mediators will gather in Doha to get ready for restored talks on a Gaza ceasefire offer.

In other places, viewpoint surveys show the race to the White Home remains too tight to call, with less than two weeks to precede the Nov. 5 election.

These elections are more dynamic and unforeseeable than many previous ones. Such volatility creates additional interest in gold, stated Julia Khandoshko, CEO at European broker Mind Money.

In the next 3 months, gold might reach $2,800, and from the annual viewpoint, it can exceed the psychologically crucial $3,000 barrier.

Palladium dipped 0.4% to $1,152.50 however increased 7% for the week.

The U.S. asked the Group of 7 allies to think about sanctions on Russian palladium and titanium, Bloomberg News reported. Russia's Nornickel is the world's largest palladium producer.

The possibility of disruptions to Russian supply comes as the remainder of the market struggles to preserve output, said Daniel Hynes, senior product strategist, ANZ.

Area silver fell 0.3% to $33.62, after scaling its greatest level given that 2012 earlier today.

Silver has begun playing catch up to gold. It benefits from its double role of financial worth and as an industrial metal with growth driven by the breakneck growth of photovoltaics, said Paul Wong, market strategist at Sprott Asset Management.

Platinum lost 0.7% at $1,019.45.

(source: Reuters)