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Investors seek out safe haven as gold gains for the third consecutive week

Investors seek out safe haven as gold gains for the third consecutive week

Gold prices fell Friday but are poised to gain for the third week in a row, thanks to safe-haven demand amid geopolitical, economic and political uncertainties, as well as an expectation of a rate cut by the U.S. Federal Reserve later this year.

As of 8:59 am, spot gold was down by 0.3% to $3,034.02 per ounce. ET (1259 GMT). U.S. Gold futures fell 0.1% to $3.040.90. Bullion is up 1.7% this week.

"It is just a small amount of profit-taking ahead of the weekend." The primary driver of the market is the ongoing safe-haven demand based on geopolitical and trade concerns.

Gold prices have reached 16 new records this year amid economic and geopolitical uncertainty. Four of these gold prices exceeded the $3,000 threshold, and on Thursday, they hit a record-high price of $3,057.21 an ounce.

Donald Trump, the president of the United States, still plans to implement new reciprocal tariffs on April 2, 2019.

The Fed held its benchmark interest rate steady on Wednesday as widely expected, but indicated two quarter-percentage-point cuts before the end of the year.

LSEG data shows that traders have priced in 71 basis point of Fed easing in this year. At least two rate cuts of 25 bps are fully priced, and a July cut is also fully priced.

Israel has announced a escalation of air, sea, and land strikes against Hamas to pressurize the release the remaining hostages. This effectively means that they have abandoned a two-month-old ceasefire, and launched a full-scale air and ground offensive against the dominant Palestinian militant organization.

In a low-interest rate environment, gold, which is traditionally seen as a safe investment in times of economic or inflation volatility, does well.

Spot silver fell 1.4% to $33.08 per ounce. Platinum lost 1% at $974.90, and palladium dropped 0.6% to $946. All three metals are set to lose weekly.

(source: Reuters)