Latest News

Gold drops below $4,000 an ounce due to US-China trade progress, which has cooled demand for safe-haven assets

On Monday, gold prices dropped below $4,000 an ounce as signs of a thawing in U.S.-China trade tensions reduced the safe-haven appeal of bullion. Market participants were awaiting this week's Federal Reserve interest rate decision.

At 10:13 am, spot gold was down by 2.6% to $4,005.11 an ounce. After briefly dropping below $4,000 an ounce earlier in the day, gold prices fell to $4,005.11 per ounce at 10:13 a.m. ET (1413 GMT). U.S. Gold futures for delivery in December were down 2.9% to $4,019.00.

Jeffrey Christian, managing partner of CPM Group, said that in addition to technical sales, gold prices are "continuing to decline due to a easing of trade tensions" which had driven the price of gold from $3,800 up to $4,400 during the first three week of October. Gold, the traditional safe-haven, reached a record of $4,381.21/oz in October 20. However, it fell 3.2% after hints that trade tensions would be eased between the two world's largest economies. On Sunday, U.S.-China negotiators outlined the basic framework of a deal that would halt the steeper American tariffs as well as Chinese controls on rare earths exports.

On Thursday, Donald Trump of the United States and Xi Jinping of China are expected to continue their discussions on a possible trade agreement.

The market expects that the Fed will reduce the rate by a quarter of a basis point at its meeting on Wednesday.

As gold is a non-yielding investment, it typically performs very well in an environment of low interest rates. Analysts and investors expect the yellow metal to reach new heights, possibly even $5,000/oz, but some remain sceptical of the long-term sustainability of this recent massive rise.

Capital Economics analysts lowered their gold forecast on Monday to $3,500/oz by the end of 2026.

Silver spot fell by 3.8%, to 46.65 cents per ounce. Platinum fell 1.1%, to 1,588.86 dollars, and palladium dropped 1.3%, to 1,409.47 dollars. (Reporting from Anjana Anil in Bengaluru and Pablo Sinha). Mark Potter edited the article.

(source: Reuters)