Business World

Gold rallies on Middle East tensions, Fed rate cut bets

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GOLD PRICES scaled a one-week peak on Friday as an escalation in the Middle East conflict fueled safe-haven buying, while softer US producer price inflation boosted bets that the US Federal Reserve might cut interest rates sooner.

Spot gold was up 1% at $2,048.21 per ounce at 2:24 p.m. ET (1924 GMT), after climbing as much as 1.7% earlier in the session.

Bullion was mostly flat on the week, but extended its run above the $2,000 level to nearly a month. US gold futures settled 1.6% higher at $2,051.60.

US and Britain launched air strikes across Yemen in retaliatio­n against Houthi forces for attacks on Red Sea shipping that the Iran-backed fighters cast as a response to the war in Gaza. Iran condemned the attacks, warning that it will fuel “insecurity and instabilit­y” in the region.

A rise in geopolitic­al risk is pushing gold prices up, and at the same time, the US central bank may be getting ready to start moderating its restrictiv­e monetary policy, said Bart Melek, head of commodity strategies at TD Securities.

US producer prices unexpected­ly fell in December amid declining costs for goods such as diesel fuel and food, suggesting inflation would continue to subside. However, data on Thursday showed US consumer prices rose more than expected in December.

Traders see an 80% probabilit­y of an interest rate cut in March, according to the CME Fedwatch tool, compared with about a 70% chance seen before the PPI report.

Spot silver rose 1.9% to $23.20 per ounce. Platinum lost 0.5% to $910.49, down for the second straight week. Palladium was down 1.3% to $975.51, falling for the third consecutiv­e week.

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