Gold pares gains as Trump ratchets down China trade-war tension

By Daniel Brightmore
Gold pared gains after U.S. President Donald Trump said China was willing to resume trade talks, easing demand for the metal as a haven, reports Bloombe...

Gold pared gains after U.S. President Donald Trump said China was willing to resume trade talks, easing demand for the metal as a haven, reports Bloomberg.

Bullion futures for December delivery advanced 0.1% to $1,539.60 an ounce at 9:34 a.m. on the Comex in New York, after surging as much as 1.8% to the highest since 2013 earlier. The metal jumped Friday and global stocks plunged as the world’s two biggest economies levied tit-for-tat tariff increases.

Markets steadied Monday after Trump said China has asked to restart trade talks, and that prospects for a deal are better now than at any time since negotiations began last year.

A top state-media editor in Beijing questioned his version of events. Gold has surged this year as the trade fight hurts the economic outlook, boosting odds of more U.S. rate cuts from the Federal Reserve. Low rates are a boon to gold, which doesn’t offer interest.

SEE ALSO:

Alacer Gold announces solid first half gold production

Newmont Goldcorp announced as world's biggest gold miner

Newcrest's Cadia achieves highest ever annual gold production

Read the latest issue of Mining Global here

The price action in gold last night was pretty indicative of just the renewed fear - the renewed macro fear and the renewed uncertainty - in the market,” Nicky Shiels, an analyst at Bank of Nova Scotia, said by phone Monday. With more tariffs “than any time before” currently in place or being put in place, “we would expect some sort of Fed easing in response to that, or accelerative Fed easing, should continue to support gold’s case.”

Gold will extend gains as the US-China standoff harms growth, risking a deeper slowdown and inviting more central-bank easing, according to UBS Group AG, which jacked up price forecasts with a prediction the precious metal may hit $1,600 within three months.

“Gold has demonstrated its safe-haven qualities and we stay long,” Giovanni Staunovo and Wayne Gordon, analysts at UBS Group AG’s wealth-management unit, said in a report before Trump’s latest remarks.

As gold’s rally has gathered pace, investors have pushed into bullion-backed exchange-traded funds, which have reached the highest since 2013. Holdings are set for a third monthly gain, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

Share

Featured Articles

EC on Importance of Minerals Security Partnership Forum

The European Commission's communications team explains what the Minerals Security Partnership Forum is, what it will do and why it is so important

EU & US form Critical Minerals Security Partnership Forum

European Union & US government form new forum to secure critical mineral supply chains, boost production, secure ESG standards & promote fair competition

World Gold Council: Gold Miners 'Must Create ESG Value'

John Mulligan is Climate Change Lead at the World Gold Council. Here he discusses the sustainability & ESG challenges facing the gold mining industry

Clean Energy Drive 'Fuelling Tech Adoption in Mining'

Technology

Exyn Technologies to Share 3D Mine Survey Insights

Digital Mining

Green Steel Push 'Needs New Regulations and Incentives'

Sustainability