Business World

Bullion prices on track for second weekly gain as Syria concerns linger

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NEW YORK/LONDON — Gold prices rose on Friday, heading for a second consecutiv­e weekly gain on lingering uncertaint­y over Western military action in Syria.

US President Donald Trump and his national security aides on Thursday discussed options on Syria, where he has threatened missile strikes in response to a suspected poison gas attack, as a Russian envoy voiced fears of wider conflict between Washington and Moscow.

Mr. Trump, however, cast doubt over the timing of his threatened strike, tweeting that a US attack “could be very soon or not so soon at all.”

Spot gold increased 0.70% at $1,344.40 per ounce by 1:38 p.m. EDT (1738 GMT), set for a weekly gain of nearly 1%. US gold futures for June delivery settled up $6, or 0.50%, at $1,347.90.

Gold is often used as a store of value in times of political and economic uncertaint­y.

“Donald Trump back-pedaled a bit in his morning tweet yesterday, but the danger is still there that the situation could escalate with Russia due to a military attack on Syria,” Quantitati­ve Commodity Research consultant Peter Fertig said.

“We are back at a cold war, which easily could turn into a hot war if someone loses their nerve — and in such a situation, gold is a haven.”

In technicals, first support for gold comes in at $1,315, near the 100-day moving average. A break of this could see gold test the 200-day moving average around $1,300.

On the higher end of gold’s trading range, “we came up on April 9th to $1,369.40. If we break through that, you could see a retest of the highs of $1,375; $1,400 will pretty much be in the cards at that point,” said RJO Futures’ Josh Graves.

Global equities recovered from a sell-off triggered by escalating trade tensions.

Meanwhile, silver rose 1.4% at $16.67 per ounce, up nearly 2% this week.

Platinum was up 0.40% at $928.40 per ounce. For the week, the metal was on course for a 1.7% gain, the biggest rise in about two months.

Palladium climbed 2.2% at $985.40 per ounce after hitting a 3-week high of $990.50. It was set for a more than 9% weekly gain, its biggest since January 2017.

The metal, more than 40% of which is produced in Russia, has bounced strongly this week as sanctions against Moscow fed into a rebound after the first quarter’s 10% slide. —

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