Gold touches record high as Trump's tariff plans spark safe-haven demand


Gold hit a record high on Friday as fresh tariff plans from U.S. President Donald Trump fuelled fears the global trade war will intensify further, prompting investors to seek refuge in the safe-haven precious metal.

Spot gold climbed 0.7% to $3,077.56 an ounce as of 0545 GMT, after hitting an all-time high of $3,079.01 earlier in the session. Bullion is up 1.8% this week, on track for a fourth straight weekly gain.

U.S. gold futures gained 0.8% to $3,086.80.

"Gold has the wind at its back at the moment. U.S. trade policy, U.S. fiscal policy, geopolitics, and a growth slowdown - everything is blowing in gold's direction," Capital.com's financial market analyst Kyle Rodda said, adding that $3,100/oz is the next big milestone for prices.

Uncertainty surrounding tariffs, potential for interest rate cuts, geopolitical conflicts and central bank buying have all fuelled gold's surge past the key $3,000/oz milestone.

"Markets are yet to have an understanding of what the retaliatory responses will be," which is also helping gold, said Marex analyst Edward Meir.

Canadian Prime Minister Mark Carney said he would respond with unspecified trade actions if Trump imposes new auto tariffs that have expanded a global trade war and hammered stocks.

Trump is set to implement reciprocal tariffs on April 2, which could stoke inflation, dampen economic growth, and escalate trade disputes.

"We continue to hold a bullish outlook towards gold prices, with gold continuing to benefit from U.S. policy uncertainty, trade tensions, military conflicts around the world, inflation worries and macro uncertainty," BMI analysts said in a note.

Gold, traditionally seen as a hedge against economic and political instability, thrives in a low-interest rate environment.

Richmond Federal Reserve President Tom Barkin asserted that the central bank's current "moderately restrictive" monetary policy is appropriate, given high levels of uncertainty and rapid policy changes in the U.S. government.

The market now awaits the U.S. personal consumption expenditures data due later in the day.

Spot silver eased 0.2% to $34.32 an ounce, platinum fell 0.3% to $984.14, and palladium lost 0.1% to $973.75. All three eyed weekly gains. - Reuters 

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Gold , bullion , tariff , Donald Trump , trade war , geopolitical

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