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Gold to drop by a week as oil prices rise, fueling inflation fears

Gold prices fell on Friday, and were on course for a weekly drop. High oil prices fueled fears of inflation as well as higher interest rates in the future as U.S. - Iran peace talks remain stalled.

As of 0609 GMT, spot gold was down by 0.2%, at $4,683.13 an ounce. After a four-week streak of gains, the metal has fallen 3% this week.

U.S. Gold Futures for June Delivery fell?0.6% at $4,697.80.

Brent crude prices are up about 17% this week, hovering above $105 per barrel. The Strait of Hormuz remains largely closed in spite of an extended ceasefire with Iran.

According to Kelvin Wong, senior analyst at OANDA, as long as there is a risk of a prolonged closure of the Strait, oil prices will remain high, pushing up gold prices.

A rise in crude oil prices could cause inflation by increasing transportation and production costs, which would increase the probability of interest rates rising.

Gold is seen as an inflation hedge. However, with high interest rates, yield-bearing investments are more appealing, and this reduces the appeal of bullion.

Wong stated that gold is stuck in a sideways range between the 50-day average of $4,900, and the 20-day average of $4,645 at the bottom. "Everything boils down to what's happening in the Middle East," he said.

Iran showed off its increased control over the Strait of Hormuz on Thursday, with a video showing commandos in speedboats?storming an enormous cargo ship. This was after the failure of peace talks which Washington had hoped would lead to the opening of?one the world's major shipping corridors.

Trump told reporters he thought Tehran was interested in a deal, but its leadership was in turmoil. He said that he wasn't in a hurry to make a deal but if Iran didn't want one "I will finish it militarily."

The U.S. Dollar is up 0.8% this week so far, making greenback priced bullion more costly for other currency holders.

The yields on the benchmark 10-year U.S. Treasury notes have increased by about 2% in this past week, increasing opportunity costs for holding non-yielding gold.

Silver spot fell 0.5%, to $75.07 an ounce. Platinum lost 0.7%, to $1,991.72, and palladium rose 0.1%, to $1,469.04. (Reporting and editing by Subhranshu Sahu, Janane Venkatraman, and Noel John)

(source: Reuters)