Playing black for the first time in the tournament, Anand was up against an English opening that got transposed to the Queen pawn game against Svidler.
Anand holds an excellent record against Svidler but the Russian was simply too cautious having lost the first round of the tournament.
The pieces changed hands at regular intervals and the truce was signed on move 31. This was just one more than Anand's previous round draw with Hikaru Nakamura of United States.
World Champion Magnus Carlsen of Norway scored his first victory at the expense of his last world championship challenger Sergey Karjakin of Russia, while Fabiano Caruana of United States put up a sterling show in the endgame to outwit Levon Aronian of Armenia and American Wesley So crashed through the defences of Ian Nepomniachtchi of Russia.
Maxime Vachier-Lagrave of France was the lone winner of the first round to survive the day unscathed as he played out a draw with Nakamura.
Carlsen has not won a Classical event for over a year now and the World Champion looks determined to change that here.
Karjakin was simply outplayed from an innocuous opening when he failed to spot a dangerous king side attack. Carlsen pocketed one pawn and wrapped it up in 42 moves.
However things were far from easy once the American missed out on a winning continuation on move 41. It was a long drawn affair thereafter that lasted 110 moves.
Nepomniachtchi proved no match for Wesley So, who proved too good and scored the first victory with black pieces. Winning a pawn and reaching a rook endgame, Wesley was remourseless in this one-sided affair.
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