Gold prices held steady after President Trump dropped tariff bombs on major trading partners around the world. The precious metal bounced back from earlier losses when traders heard about new trade penalties hitting Japan and South Korea. Trump slapped both Asian countries with hefty 25 percent taxes on their goods shipped to America. The move sent their currencies tumbling and pushed the dollar higher against other money. Currency experts say stronger dollars make gold cost more for buyers outside the United States.
Trump gave countries until August 1 to cut better trade deals or face the music. The president promised more tariff announcements would follow as he reshapes America's trade relationships. Markets hate uncertainty and Trump's trade war threats have investors running scared. Smart money keeps flowing into safe assets like gold when global tensions heat up. The shiny metal has already jumped more than 25 percent this year as nervous traders seek protection.
Gold stayed flat around 3,337 dollars per ounce during Tuesday morning trading in Singapore. The metal came close to hitting record highs back in April and sits just 160 dollars away from those peaks. Silver and palladium barely moved during the session. Platinum dipped slightly as traders watched currency markets for clues about future moves. Trade wars and political drama continue driving demand for precious metals as safe harbor investments.
Trump gave countries until August 1 to cut better trade deals or face the music. The president promised more tariff announcements would follow as he reshapes America's trade relationships. Markets hate uncertainty and Trump's trade war threats have investors running scared. Smart money keeps flowing into safe assets like gold when global tensions heat up. The shiny metal has already jumped more than 25 percent this year as nervous traders seek protection.
Gold stayed flat around 3,337 dollars per ounce during Tuesday morning trading in Singapore. The metal came close to hitting record highs back in April and sits just 160 dollars away from those peaks. Silver and palladium barely moved during the session. Platinum dipped slightly as traders watched currency markets for clues about future moves. Trade wars and political drama continue driving demand for precious metals as safe harbor investments.