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Rate-cuts and geopolitical risk are driving gold to a one-week high.

Gold prices reached a new high on Thursday. The trend was fueled by the simmering Middle East tensions, and cooler U.S. data which fueled fresh bets about Federal Reserve rate reductions.

Spot gold rose 0.9% to $3,383.79 per ounce at 0930 ET (1330 GMT), the highest level since June 5.

U.S. Gold Futures rose 1.8% to $3404.60.

Gold is up for a second day in a row, largely due to increased geopolitical risk. "If gold clears the $3,400 mark again, there are minor hurdles of $3,417 or $3,431 -- but ultimately, a breakout towards new all-time records looks likely," said Peter Grant.

Donald Trump, the U.S. president, said that the U.S. is moving personnel from the Middle East as it "could become a dangerous area". Aziz Nasirzadeh, the Iranian defence minister, said that on Wednesday if Iran were to be subjected by strikes they would retaliate against U.S. bases located in the area.

In other data, U.S. producer price increases were less than expected for May. The number of Americans who filed new claims for unemployment benefits remained unchanged last week at higher levels as the labour market continued to gradually ease.

The traders see 80% of a Fed rate cut in September, and a second cut as early as October. This is compared to the December rate cut that was expected before data.

The latest data followed Wednesday's cooler-than-anticipated Consumer Price Index (CPI) report for May.

Trump stated on Wednesday that he was willing to extend the deadline of July 8 for concluding trade negotiations with other countries before U.S. higher tariffs go into effect. However, he did not think this would be necessary.

Spot silver fell 0.2% to $36.14 an ounce, after reaching its highest level since 2012.

Grant stated that silver is poised to reach $40 if it surpasses the current $38 level, thanks to a long-term supply deficit as well as renewed technical strength.

Palladium dropped 3.1%, to $1046.50, as platinum remained at its four-year-high. Ashitha Shivprasad in Bengaluru and Sarah Qureshi report.

(source: Reuters)