Bloomberg
7 hours ago
Gold rose to a fresh record above $4,200 an ounce and silver surged, boosted by an escalation in US-China frictions and bets the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates twice more this year.
Bullion climbed as much as 1.8% to a peak of $4,218.29 on Wednesday. Spot silver advanced as much as 3.2%, while availability of the metal in the London market remained tight. Silver had a volatile day on Tuesday, when prices surge to an all-time high above $53.55 an ounce before tumbling sharply.
Yields on US Treasuries fell to the lowest levels in months, after Fed Chair Jerome Powell signaled the US central bank is on track to deliver another quarter-point cut later this month. Lower yields and borrowing costs tend to benefit precious metals, which don’t pay interest.
Meanwhile, risk-off sentiment dialed up — boosting gold’s haven appeal — after President Donald Trump issued a fresh trade threat to China. The comments injected fresh tensions into the relationship between the world’s two largest economies, with Beijing vowing to retaliate after Washington threatened an additional 100% tariff on China last week.
In silver, the market has been gripped by a lack of liquidity in London, sparking a worldwide hunt for metal and driving benchmark prices to soar above futures in New York. The gap between the two markets on Wednesday was about $1.09 an ounce, while the annualized one-month cost of borrowing silver was roughly 17% on Tuesday, both historically high levels.
Traders remain on edge ahead of the conclusion of the US administration’s Section 232 probe into critical minerals, which could lead to import tariffs on certain commodities. While silver isn’t on the US Geological Survey’s current list of critical minerals, it is among six proposed additions for a 2025 draft list being considered.
The four main precious metals have surged between 59% and 83% this year, in a rally that has dominated commodity markets. Gold’s advance has been underpinned by central-bank buying, rising holdings in exchange-traded funds, and Fed rate cuts.
Demand for havens has been aided by recurrent US-China trade tensions, threats to the Fed’s independence, and a US government shutdown. Investors have also been seeking safety in precious metals to protect themselves from the threats posed by runaway budget deficits — a phenomenon known as the “debasement trade.” Central bank buying has also been a key driver of the run-up in gold prices.
A lot of the gold rally “is being driven by physical buying, and if you look at central banks, they are going out and buying huge quantities”, Saad Rahim, chief economist at Trafigura Group. Fears of debt sustainability and the prospect of lower rates have investors “looking to gold as a store of value and for safety,” he said.
Spot gold traded higher at $ an ounce as of in New York. Palladium and platinum also rose.
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