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Gold drops by nearly 1% following Trump's extension of tariff deadline on EU products

Gold prices dropped nearly 1% Monday, after U.S. president Donald Trump dropped his threats to impose tariffs of 50% on goods imported from the European Union starting June 1. This reduced demand for this safe-haven investment.

By 1250 GMT, spot gold was down 0.8% to $3,332.04 per ounce. U.S. Gold Futures dropped 1% to $3331.90.

The UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said, "I'd call it a range trading day." He attributed the modest decline in prices to Trump delaying the imposition higher tariffs against the EU.

The activity today is likely to be lower due to Memorial Day in the United States.

Due to the public holiday, Monday was a closed market in both the United States of America and Britain.

Trump restored the deadline of July 9 to allow talks between Washington, DC and the European Union in order to reach a deal.

Gold prices rose on Friday after Trump re-initiated tariff threats against EU goods. He also said that he would consider a 25% tariff for any Apple iPhones sold in the U.S., but not manufactured there.

Staunovo stated that "we still expect higher prices in the months to come, and we are expecting the yellow metal price to test the $3,500/oz level again."

Data showed that China's net imports of gold via Hong Kong increased by more than two-fold in April compared to March and reached their highest level since March 2024.

Citi upgraded its gold price target from $3150 to $3500/oz on Sunday, citing U.S. tariffs, geopolitical risk and budget concerns. The bank anticipates that gold prices will consolidate between $3100/oz to $3500/oz.

War in Ukraine is one of the geopolitical threats. Ukraine's regional officials and emergency services reported that Russia had attacked Ukraine a third time in a row. This was a day following the largest aerial attack so far.

Silver spot fell by 0.3% at $33.38, while platinum dropped 0.6% to 1,088.53 and Palladium fell 0.6%, to $987.27. (Reporting from Anmol Choubey, Bengaluru; additional reporting by IshaanArora; editing by JananeVenkatraman and Susan Fenton).

(source: Reuters)