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Gold and silver reach record highs as safe-haven buyers buy after Trump EU tariff warning

Gold and silver reached record highs Monday as investors fled to safety following the warnings of U.S. president Donald Trump about extra tariffs being imposed on certain European countries over a dispute involving Greenland.

Gold spot jumped by 1.5%, to $4,662.85 an ounce, at 1121 GMT. It had previously reached a high of $4689.39.

U.S. Gold Futures for February Delivery increased 1.6% to $4.668 an ounce.

Trump threatened several European Allies on Saturday with escalating Tariffs, unless they allowed the U.S. to purchase Greenland. This intensified a dispute about Denmark's vast Arctic island.

Linh Tran is a senior market analyst with XS.com. She said that when institutional and policy risk resurfaces, the markets will tend to move quickly towards safe-haven investments, with gold emerging as a preferred choice.

The dollar and stock markets?fell' as Trump's new tariff threats prompted investors to seek out safe havens like gold, Japanese yen, and Swiss franc.

Gold is more likely to perform well in times of geopolitical or economic uncertainty as well as when interest rates are low. It has gained over 64% since 2025 and more than 8% in the first half of this year.

Michelle Bowman, Vice Chair of the Federal Reserve's Supervision Department, said that a "fragile" job market could deteriorate quickly and that the U.S. Central Bank should be prepared to lower interest rates if necessary.

The markets expect the Fed to hold rates at its meeting on January 27-28, but they are pricing in at least two 25 basis-point rate reductions this year.

Silver spot also rose 3.7%, to $93.24, from a high of $94.08. White metal has increased by over 30% this year.

Analysts at JP Morgan?said they prefer gold to silver. They said that any disruption in silver could have some short-term spillover into gold. However, it still represents a good opportunity to buy gold.

Other precious metals rose in price as well. Spot platinum increased 1.2% to $2355.96 an ounce while palladium increased 0.7% to $1811.55.

(source: Reuters)