That saw swaps traders boost bets on interest rate cuts, and they are now pricing almost three reductions for the rest of this year. Lower borrowing costs tend to increase the appeal of non-yielding gold, which has also seen support from strong haven demand amid concerns over the US central bank’s future.
Also Read: Central bank buying and price surge push gold to second-largest global reserve assetLooking ahead, renewed rate cut hopes will face tests this week from benchmark revisions for US jobs data on Tuesday and US producer and consumer inflation prints on Wednesday and Thursday. Traders will also watch how the market absorbs auctions of 3-, 10-, and 30-year Treasuries.
Both gold and silver have more than doubled over the past three years, with mounting risks in geopolitics, the economy and global trade driving haven demand. An escalation in US President Donald Trump’s attacks against the Fed has increased worries over its independence, with gold prices rallying more than 8% over the past two weeks as demand for safe-haven assets intensifies.Investors are waiting for a landmark ruling on whether Trump has legitimate grounds to remove Fed Governor Lisa Cook, which could allow the president to replace her with a dovish-leaning official. Goldman Sachs Group Inc. said last week that gold could rally to almost $5,000 an ounce if the Fed’s independence were damaged and investors shifted just a small portion of holdings from Treasuries into bullion.
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“I wouldn’t want to stand on the short side of this trade, though I do think profit taking could emerge,” said Ahmad Assiri, an analyst at Pepperstone. “Today’s rally is being powered by multiple forces converging at once, a backdrop that keeps the medium-term story intact, even if the near term turns volatile.”
Trump’s administration also moved on Friday to exempt gold bullion, along with some metals, from its country-based tariffs. The measure formalises a plan to exempt gold bars from tariffs, after a US Customs and Border Protection ruling weeks ago stunned traders and caused confusion by indicating bullion would be subject to import duties.
Meanwhile, data released at the weekend showed the People’s Bank of China increased its gold holdings in August for a 10th month, in a continued push to diversify its reserves away from US dollars. Spot gold was trading 1.3% higher at $3,634.14 an ounce as of 11:39 a.m. in New York. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index edged lower. Silver, palladium and platinum all gained.
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