Gold

Focusing on gold investments

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Gold prices still going strong

We believe the demand is across the board. We see institutions either adding to or establishing long term strategic asset allocation type positions. We see individual investors doing the same. We see a certain amount of FOMO. There’s a fear of missing out whenever the price gains momentum to the upside” George Milling-Stanley, Chief Gold Strategist at State Street Global Advisors, told FOX Business.

Source – FOX News

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Barrick Gold Corp. stock rises

Shares of Barrick Gold Corp. 

ABX-3.10% rose 2.32% to C$26.47 Wednesday, in what proved to be an all-around positive trading session for the Canadian market, with the S&P/TSX Composite Index 

GSPTSE-0.78% rising 0.49% to 25,328.36.

Source – Market Watch

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Gold down 1.2%

Spot gold was down 1.2% at $2,882.49 an ounce as of 09:42 a.m. ET (1442 GMT), after hitting its lowest level since February 12 earlier in the session. Prices hit a record high of $2,956.15 on Monday, driven by safe-haven flows.

“The direction of gold is very evident, and these short-term bumps and some profit taking is just a normal part of the cycle,” said Alex Ebkarian, chief operating officer at Allegiance Gold.

Spot silver retreated 0.5% to $31.67 an ounce, platinum fell 0.9% to $957.10 and palladium dropped 0.9% to $917.96.

Source – Reuters

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Citi predicts 25% copper-specific tariff

Citi anticipates an eventual implementation of a 25% copper-specific tariff by the fourth quarter of 2025, following U.S. President Donald Trump’s executive order initiating an investigation into U.S. copper imports, the bank said in a note on Wednesday.

Source – Reuters

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Gold spot fell and investors waiting for data on Friday

Spot gold fell 0.7% to $2,894.55 an ounce as of 09:44 a.m. ET (1444 GMT). Bullion, a preferred hedge against uncertainty and inflation, hit a record high of $2,956.15 on Monday amid trade war concerns emerging from tariff threats.

“Bullish trend is still in place… We are not surprised by a period of consolidation ahead of some piece of important data,” said David Meger, director of metals trading at High Ridge Futures.

Spot silver was down 0.5% to $31.57, platinum eased 0.4% to $963 and palladium dropped 0.4% to $924.01.

Source – Reuters

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London Metals Exchange, Mixed signals in precious metals

Zinc, the biggest loser in the LME complex, is currently trading 4.8% lower than at the start of the year.

Meanwhile, tin prices have increased by 13.5% in the first few weeks of the year, making it the biggest winner.

Copper refining grew as expected at 4.2%, but mine production surprised at 2.3%, 0.5% higher than the ICSG September forecast.

The supply of refined copper is under threat due to mine production, which has put downward pressure on processing fees in copper smelters, according to Commerzbank.

The lead market experienced a minor oversupply due to a substantial increase in mine production.

This increase, just under 2%, was fueled by significantly higher supply in the US, Australia, Peru, and Mexico.

Source – Invezz

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Gold falls, trade war fears continue

Spot gold fell 0.6% to $2,934.99 an ounce as of 09:55 a.m. (1455 GMT), after reaching $2,956.15 on Monday.

U.S. gold futures declined 0.5% to $2,948.60.

Trump said on Monday that tariffs on Canadian and Mexican imports were “on time and on schedule”

“I still think that there’s enough uncertainty out there associated with tariffs (and) trade more generally… dips are going to continue to be viewed as buying opportunities,” said Peter Grant, vice president and senior metals strategist at Zaner Metals.

Spot silver shed 1.2% to $31.96 an ounce, platinum dropped 0.8% to $959.35 and palladium lost 0.8% to $932.50.

Source – Reuters

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Precious Metals with highs and pressure

Gold

Gold remains stuck near the resistance at $2930 – $2940 as traders continue to take profits off the table near historic highs.

Silver

Silver declined below the $32.50 level as gold/silver ratio climbed above the 91 level.

Platinum

Platinum tests new lows as traders react to the strong sell-off in palladium markets, which are down by 3.4%.

Source – FXEMPIRE

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Gold prices higher, Silver prices lagging

Asian and European shares were mixed to weaker in trading overnight. U.S. stock indexes are set to open higher on corrective bounces following Friday’s big sell offs.

German stocks rose as investors cheered a win by German conservative leader Friedrich Merz in Sunday’s elections.

The Euro zone January consumer price index came in at up 2.5%, year-on-year, which was right in line with market expectations.

Source – KITCO News

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Gold and Silver in demand

“The uncertainty over US tariffs is pushing investors toward safe-haven assets like gold,” said Michael Hewson, Chief Market Analyst at CMC Markets.

The weaker US Dollar, coupled with uncertainties surrounding US trade policies, is supporting silver’s bullish momentum.

Gold (XAU/USD) is trading at $2,940.57, showing a modest gain of +0.07%.

Silver (XAG/USD) is trading at $32.68, slightly down by -0.03%.

Source – FXEMPIRE