JPMorgan analysts, led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou, anticipate that Bitcoin will outperform gold in the latter half of 2025. This projection is attributed to increasing corporate investments and gro...
Gold prices recovered some ground earlier on Thursday during the North American session after US economic data suggested that factory gate inflation continues decelerating. At the same time, consumer spending was debilitated due to US tariffs.
Gold has continued to trade with a heavy bearish bias as tariff de-escalation momentum gained pace, while Fed cut expectations was scaled back in terms of the timing of next cut and quantum. Gold was last at 3174.52 levels, OCBC's FX analysts Frances Cheung and Christopher Wong note.
Gold (XAU/USD) reverses course and heads higher towards $3,192 at the time of writing on Thursday with tensions building around the Ukraine-Russia talks taking place in Turkey.
Gold price (XAU/USD) is looking to build on its modest intraday bounce from the $3,120 area, or the lowest level since April 10, touched earlier this Thursday, as a turnaround in the global risk sentiment boosts demand for traditional safe-haven assets.
The Gold price (XAU/USD) trades with mild gains near $3,180 during the early Asian session on Thursday. However, the potential upside for the yellow metal might be capped in the near term due to better risk appetite and progress in trade talks.
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which measures the value of the US Dollar against a basket of currencies, softened near 100.60 on Wednesday as cooler-than-expected inflation and news of ongoing US-South Korea currency discussions pressured the Greenback.
Gold price plummeted for the second day out of three on Wednesday, driven mainly by an improvement in risk appetite following positive trade news linked to the United States (US).
Gold fell below $3200/oz as a pause in Chinese ETF flows and geopolitical optimism triggered a pullback—but underlying support from central banks and institutional inertia keeps downside risk asymmetric, TDS' Senior Commodity Strategist Daniel Ghali notes.
Gold prices remain under pressure as investors reassess the interest rate outlook and digest mixed signals from recent US economic data. At the time of writing, XAU/USD is down 2.23% on the day, trading below $3,200, extending a week-to-date decline of 4.26%.
Gold (XAU/USD) dips back to $3,235 on Wednesday while the worst of the selling pressure seems to be over due to a softer US Dollar (USD). The softer-than-expected inflation reading for April released on Tuesday, gave markets a push to head into Risk On assets, with the widely-feared inflation shock
Gold price (XAU/USD) remains depressed through the first half of the European session on Wednesday, though it manages to hold above the #3,200 round-figure mark or the weekly through.
The Gold price (XAU/USD) trades in negative territory around $3,245 during the early Asian session on Wednesday. Improved risk appetite in the financial markets due to a tariff deal between the United States (US) and China weighs on the yellow metal, a safe-haven asset.
Gold prices traded with a positive tone on Tuesday, following Monday’s drop of over 2.70%, exchanged hands at around $3,250, up by 0.42%. A softer-than-expected US inflation report and the trade truce between China and the US may keep Gold prices capped beneath the $3,300 figure.
The price of Gold fell by up to 3.5%, or more than $100, to just over $3,200 per troy ounce following the news of the temporary lifting of most of the reciprocal tariffs between the US and China, Commerzbank's commodity analyst Carsten Fritsch notes.
Gold (XAU/USD) still has quite a long way to go back and test that all-time high at $3,500, currently trading near $3,256 at the time of writing on Tuesday. The precious metal recovers parts from the 2.65% correction that took place on Monday after the US-China trade deal was announced.
The Gold price (XAU/USD) edges lower to around $3,235 during the early Asian session on Tuesday. The precious metal remains on the defensive due to a stronger US Dollar (USD), higher US yields, and optimism on the US-China trade deal.
Gold prices tumbled over 3% on Monday, following improvements in risk appetite after weekend discussions between the US and China, which agreed to a 90-day tariff reduction. At the time of writing, the XAU/USD trades at $3,225, having hit a daily high of $3,326.
Developments on trade over the weekend were as close to an about-face as one could have hoped for, TDS' Senior Commodity Strategist Daniel Ghali notes.
Copper and other industrial metals rose this morning, with easing trade tensions giving metals markets a boost. At a briefing following the talks, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said neither nation wanted their economies to decouple.
Gold (XAU/USD) sinks more than 3.0% at the start of the European trading session and heads towards $3,231 at the time of writing as after US and China have brought some low-hanging fruit for the equity markets.
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