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Metal markets are a frenzy as gold tops $4500 and silver and platinum both hit new records

On Wednesday, gold surged above $4,500 per ounce for the first time, while silver, platinum, and other precious metals also reached record highs.?Investors were rushing into precious metals as a hedge against geopolitical risks and trade uncertainties, and to prepare themselves for further U.S. interest rate cuts expected in 2026.

Gold spot was unchanged at $4,481.90 an ounce as of 0803 GMT. It had earlier reached a session high of $4,525.19. U.S. Gold Futures for February Delivery rose by 0.1%, to $4,509.20 per ounce.

Platinum jumped 2.1% from $2,377.50 to $2,323.95 despite hitting a record high of $2,377.50 earlier. Silver rose 0.7%.

Palladium rose?3%, reaching $1,919.17 - its highest level for three years.

Ilya Spirak, global macro head at Tastylive, said that precious metals are more of a speculative story around the idea that with de-globalisation you need an asset which can act as a go-between without any sovereign risk, especially as tensions persist between the U.S.

Spivak said that thin liquidity at the end of the year exaggerated recent price moves, but the overall theme was likely to continue. Gold is expected to reach $5,000 in the next six months to a year, and silver could push towards $80, as markets react to key psychological levels.

The gold price has risen by more than 70% in the past year. This is its largest annual gain since 1979. Its rise was driven by safe haven demand, central bank buying, dedollarisation trends, and ETF flows. Traders are pricing two rate cuts for next year.

Silver's price has increased by more than 150% in the same time period. It is outpacing gold due to strong investment demand and its inclusion on U.S. Critical Minerals?list.

Tim Waterer is the chief market analyst at KCM Trade. He said that gold and silver "have been hitting the accelerator this week", with new record highs. This reflects their appeal as store of value amid anticipations of lower U.S. interest rates and lingering debt.

Palladium and platinum, which are primarily used to reduce emissions in automobile catalytic convertors, have surged on tight mine supplies, tariff uncertainty and a shift away from gold investment. Platinum has risen by 160% and palladium is up more than 100% for the year.

Spivak explained that platinum and palladium are catching up, but they will still lag gold once liquidity returns.

(source: Reuters)