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Gold hits record high as stocks rise on investors' interest in Fed reform

Global shares rose Friday, as investors held on to the belief that U.S. rates could fall even further this year. U.S. Gold futures also hit a new record high due to uncertainty about whether U.S. import duties would be applied to the most common sizes of gold bar.

Reportage

The news that the U.S. is planning a truce with Russia sent global benchmark oil prices to a new session low of $1 per barrel. The economic outlook was impacted by tariffs, which added pressure to crude.

Dollar was headed for a loss of 1% per week after U.S. president Donald Trump

Moved to reshape

The U.S. Central Bank announced its decision on Thursday. After Adriana Kugler abruptly left, he nominated Stephen Miran, the chair of the Council of Economic Advisers, for a temporary board seat, narrowing down his list to replace Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell, who's term ends on May 15.

Miran shares the same views as Trump who has criticized Powell for cutting rates "too late", despite the fact that growth is still holding and inflation is increasing.

Ray Attrill of National Australia Bank, Sydney's head of FX Strategy said: "It locks-in a vote in favor of rate cuts for all meetings from now until the end of the month."

He added that "markets are already traveling with a very high expectation of a rate reduction." There is a question over whether he will be able to ratify the agreement in time for September's meeting.

Bloomberg News reported

The Fed Governor Christopher Waller is emerging as the leading candidate for the Chair.

The MSCI All-Country Index was up by 0.53%. This is just below the record highs set two weeks ago.

Wall Street saw the Dow Jones Industrial Average rise 0.53% at 44,201.25. The S&P 500 rose 0.72% to 6,385.95, and the Nasdaq Composite gained 0.85% at 21423.01.

The European stock market rose on the back of a string of strong earnings and the optimism that U.S.

Tariffs

Negotiations would take place over the new tax that was introduced on Thursday.

The STOXX 600 was up by 0.15%. The European stock market has recovered from its five-week lows on Friday thanks to a combination of largely positive corporate results, and bets that the Fed will continue to cut interest rates.

The SMI index in Zurich edged up as traders continued to ignore Switzerland's

Tariff of 39% on U.S. products

coming into effect.

The shock is real. Now the question is, how will it impact the economy, the data and when? Samy Chaar, Lombard Odier's economist, said that up until now the impact has been less than expected.

Tariffs are higher than they were in April. The relief over lower than expected duties could be short-lived. Chaar noted that the European Union has a 15% duty instead of the 50% Trump had threatened.

"That is the vulnerability on the market. ... It is focused on the good news which is that it is not about getting 50% but rather 15%. The problem is that 15% represents a huge shock, and at some point it will show up in the data," said he.

U.S. Customs and Border Protection published a ruling Friday on its website, which was interpreted by the gold industry as meaning that U.S. import duties could be applied to the U.S.'s most popular sizes of gold bar.

The Financial Times broke the news that gold futures had hit a new record of $3,534.10.

Brent oil futures fell 0.33% to $66.21 a barrel, while U.S. crude dropped 0.5% to $63.56.

After weak demand for a 30-year Bond, the benchmark yield on the 10-year U.S. note rose by 3.7 basis points.

Auction

The latest in a series of disappointing sales this week.

The dollar increased by 0.45%, to 147.24 Japanese yen.

The dollar index, which measures the greenback's value against other major currencies, rose 0.25%.

(source: Reuters)