· Gold prices gained on Friday as investors bought the safe-haven metal as fears of a fresh wave of coronavirus cases added to the gloomy economic outlook from the U.S. Federal Reserve.
· Spot gold rose 0.2% to $1,730.57 per ounce by 2:10 p.m. ET (1810 GMT) and has jumped about 2.7% so far this week, heading for its biggest gain since the week of April 10.
· U.S. gold futures settled down 0.1% at $1,737.30.
· "Despite the tentative stock market rebound this morning, we're seeing gold prices climb because there's still steady safe-haven demand by institutional traders," said Edward Moya, senior market analyst at broker OANDA.
A recent spike in COVID-19 cases in about a dozen U.S. states partially reflects increased testing, but many of those states are also seeing rising hospitalizations.
"This is not a second wave. This is just the virus working its way throughout the country and you're going to see that derail a lot of the reopening plans across the country, which means slower economic activity - that should support gold prices," Moya added.
· Major U.S. stock indexes bounced back from the previous session's rout on Thursday arising from Fed expectations of a long road to economic recovery that cast a shadow over investor bets on a quick economic rebound.
· Elsewhere, palladium rose 0.4% to $1,929.12 per ounce, while silver declined 1.5% to $17.43.
· Platinum eased 0.4% to $808.18 an ounce and was set for its biggest weekly fall since end-March.
Reference: Reuters