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Gold recovers from a five-week low, but inflation worries persist

Gold prices rebounded from the five-week low of Monday's session on Tuesday, as oil prices declined, but Middle East tensions, inflation fears and persistent Middle East tensions kept gains in check.

Gold spot rose 0.7%, to $4,553.41 an ounce, by 0935 GMT. It had fallen as low as it has been since March 31, on Monday. U.S. Gold Futures for June Delivery gained 0.7%, reaching $4,563.50.

The independent analyst Ross Norman said that a pullback in oil prices on profit-taking despite the intensification of tensions in the Middle East has lifted gold from its five-week-low, as fears seem to have normalised.

Brent crude futures fell on Tuesday, but remained above $110 per barrel as investors watched Middle East developments.

As the 'U.S. Iran and the United States launched new?attacks to compete for control of the Strait of Hormuz. This was despite conflicting reports of ships passing through this strait recently.

Since the beginning of the U.S. and Israeli war against Iran in late Feburary, gold prices are inversely related to crude. Gold is a hedge to geopolitical instability, but rising energy costs have led to fears of inflation and reduced hopes for rate cuts. This has pushed gold prices down by more than 13%.

Investors are turning to assets with?better returns in high-interest rate environments.

Norman stated that "although gold's fundamentals?point to gains this year, it is clear the market is in a long-term consolidation phase right now, and?the physical markets are trying to establish a floor price,?especially after epic movements in Q1",

Investors are also watching for a number of data points on jobs, including the ADP Employment Report and the April payrolls reports this week, which will likely determine the U.S. Federal Reserve’s policy direction.

Silver spot rose by 1.3%, to $73.69 per ounce. Platinum gained 1.7%, to $1977.20. Palladium rose by 1.8%, to $1507.00. (Reporting by Anjana Anil in Bengaluru; Editing by Diti Pujara)

(source: Reuters)