
Gold tops 1-month high as Middle East tensions spur safe-haven demand
NEW YORK: Gold prices climbed on Friday to their highest point in more than a month, on track for a weekly gain, as investors sought safe-haven assets after Israel's strike on Iran heightened Middle East tensions.
Spot gold was up 1.3 per cent at US$3,428.28 an ounce, as of 0134 GMT, after hitting its highest level since May 7 earlier in the session. Bullion has gained more than 3.5 per cent so far this week.
US gold futures gained 1.4 per cent to US$3,449.60.
Geopolitical tensions escalated after Israel struck Iran as tensions mounted over US efforts to halt Iran's production of atomic bomb materials.
"This latest spike in hostilities in the Middle East has taken the focus off trade negotiations for now, with investors making a play towards safe-haven assets in response," said Tim Waterer, chief market analyst at KCM Trade.
Israel declared a state of emergency, citing expected missile and drone attacks from Tehran, and the US military is preparing for various contingencies in the Middle East, including potential assistance with evacuating American civilians, a US official told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
"Gold surged past resistance around the US$3400 on news of the airstrikes, and further upside could be in-store should the escalation continue," Waterer said.
Signaling a cooling US labor market and subdued inflation pressures, the number of Americans filing new applications for unemployment benefits held at an eight-month high last week, while slowing domestic demand helped to restrain producer prices in May.
The data released a day after the Labor Department reported a moderate rise in consumer prices in May, bolstered expectations of an earlier rate cut.
Traders are now expecting a 55-basis-point rate cut by the year-end, starting in September rather than October as previously anticipated.
Elsewhere, spot silver edged down 0.1 per cent at US$36.33 per ounce, platinum fell 0.8 per cent to US$1,285.21, while palladium was steady at US$1,055.21. All three metals were headed for weekly gain.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

The Star
26 minutes ago
- The Star
Bangladesh faces textile tsunami
BANGLADESH's limited capacity to deal with the enormous waste generated by its textile sector may prove unsustainable as the global fashion industry faces pressure to reduce its environmental footprint. The world's second-largest apparel producer, Bangladesh only recycles a small percentage of its textile waste, with the rest shipped abroad or left to pollute the landscape. As more countries introduce rules requiring greater recycled content in clothes, analysts and business owners say Bangladesh must expand recycling to meet demand from a global textile recycling market projected to be worth US$9.4bil by 2027. The European Union published in March its first roadmap towards meeting the standards under its Ecodesign for Sustainable Products Regulation, which includes provisions for reducing the environmental harm caused by the textile industry. This will require Bangladesh and other fashion suppliers to boost recycling while improving working conditions in what is largely an informal sector, said Patrick Schroder, a senior research fellow at the British think tank Chatham House. 'As the call for recycling grows and fast fashion goes out of fashion in the coming years, millions of jobs will be impacted, and Bangladesh needs to think ahead to step up its capacity to keep up with the changes,' he said. Tonnes of waste Bangladesh's fashion industry is estimated to produce up to 577,000 metric tonnes of textile waste from the factories each year. Most of it is shipped abroad, and the rest is left to clog bodies of water, pollute the soil, enter landfills or be incinerated, which produces toxic gases, according to a report by Switch to Circular Economy Value Chains, a project supported by the EU and the Finnish government. What is processed has evolved into a vast, informal business in Bangladesh. Thousands of informal workshops sort and bundle the waste, known as jhut, and what remains in Bangladesh is downcycled to make low-value products like mattresses, pillows and cushions. When clothing scraps are swept up from factory floors, politicians and other influential people control who gets them and at what price, said Asadun Noor, project coordinator at the United Nations Industrial Development Organisation in Dhaka. 'This is a very opaque process, offering limited visibility of the waste value chain to clothing brands and suppliers,' he said. The scraps go to hundreds of mostly unregistered workshops near the capital Dhaka, where they are cleaned and sorted into batches based on quality, colour and other considerations. Tens of thousands of workers, 70% of them women, sort the remnants for 10 to 12 hours a day, a study by the UN's children agency Unicef said last year. Workers said they toil for low wages without key safety measures, like drinking water, paid sick leave or protection from harassment. One of them is Sabura Begum, 30, who works with 250 other women at a workshop in the city of Narayanganj, near Dhaka. 'I earn a wage of about US$80 a month and it does not make it easy to run my family,' she said. A small share of the waste sorted in workshops like Begum's is sent to about two dozen recycling factories in Bangladesh. A large portion is exported to other countries such as India or Finland for recycling into new fibre where this is a larger base of recycling facilities as well as advanced technology like chemical recycling that produces strong, fresh fibres. Some of the fibres made from exported scraps are then sent back to Bangladesh to be made into clothes. More local recycling could save Bangladesh about US$700mil a year in imports, the Switch to Circular Economy Value Chains report estimated. Other major textile hubs are ramping up recycling capacity. For example, India recycles or reuses about 4.7 million tonnes, or about 60%, of its textile waste, according to a report by Fashion for Good, a coalition of businesses and non-profits. Doing a better job Some Bangladeshi companies are aiming to compete and provide proper labour standards. In 2017, Entrepreneur Abdur Razzaque set up Recycle Raw, which has now become one of the largest waste-processing businesses in Bangladesh. 'We offer decent wages and respect basic labour standards – ensuring things like drinking water, air circulation and security for our largely female workforce – so we attract and retain them much better than others,' Abdur Razzaque said. A few local recycling factories are also investing in adding more production lines, but large-scale investment in technology like chemical recycling, with support from fashion brands and development-finance organisations is needed, said Abdullah Rafi, CEO of recycler Broadway Regenerated Fibre, based in the city of Ashulia, near Dhaka. However, investors expect a regular supply of waste feed stock and that means the current opaque system of handling waste would have to go, he said. 'What we now need is more finance and collaboration among brands, suppliers, waste handlers and recyclers to scale up our capacity,' said Abdullah. — Reuters


The Star
39 minutes ago
- The Star
Trump Media's registration for bitcoin treasury deal becomes effective
FILE PHOTO: Representations of cryptocurrency Bitcoin are seen in this illustration taken November 25, 2024. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File Photo (Reuters) -Trump Media and Technology Group said on Friday that the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has declared effective the registration for its bitcoin treasury deal. The company said it raised about $2.3 billion through a mix of debt and equity agreements with participation from around 50 investors. It said in May that the bitcoin will be held on Trump Media's balance sheet alongside existing cash and short-term investments totaling $759 million as of the end of the first quarter. Several companies, including video game retailer GameStop and Strategy, are adding bitcoin and other cryptocurrencies to their balance sheets to capitalize on rising token prices as the Trump administration embraces digital assets. (Reporting by Harshita Mary Varghese in Bengaluru; Editing by Alan Barona)


The Star
39 minutes ago
- The Star
Trump urged EchoStar, FCC chair to cut a deal on spectrum -Bloomberg
FILE PHOTO: A satellite model is placed on EchoStar Satellite Services logo in this picture illustration taken April 4, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration/File photo WASHINGTON (Reuters) -President Donald Trump urged EchoStar Corp Chairman Charlie Ergen and Federal Communications Commission Chair Brendan Carr to reach a deal over the fate of the company's wireless spectrum licenses, Bloomberg reported on Friday. EchoStar shares were up 52% in after-hours trading Friday on the report. On Thursday, Trump met with Ergen and he telephoned Carr, who came to the White House to join the meeting, Bloomberg reported. The White House and EchoStar declined to comment. The FCC did not immediately respond to a request from Reuters for comment on Friday. EchoStar has been trying to shield its cache of wireless spectrum licenses from the threat of revocation by the FCC. U.S. satellite TV provider DirecTV terminated its agreement to acquire EchoStar's satellite television business last year, which includes rival Dish TV, over a failed debt-exchange offer. In May, the FCC told EchoStar it was investigating the company's compliance obligations to provide 5G service in the U.S., questioning EchoStar's buildout extension and mobile-satellite service. EchoStar said the FCC disclosure was "harming EchoStar's ongoing deployment and threaten its viability as a wireless provider as well as endanger the video and broadband satellite services upon which millions of consumers rely." The company added "the possibility of reversing prior grants of authority related to spectrum for which EchoStar paid billions and in which it invested billions more, in contravention of long-standing commission precedent." EchoStar has previously disclosed that it missed roughly $500 million in interest payments, citing uncertainty around the ongoing FCC review. (Reporting by David Shepardson; Editing by Leslie Adler and David Gregorio)