Asia’s richest families are taking a hands-on approach to gold, running operations more like 19th-century trading houses than passive investors. Multi-family offices and dealers such as Cavendish Investment Corp., J. Rotbart & Co., and Goldstrom are sourcing gold from African mines, refining it in Hong Kong, and selling it to Asian and Chinese buyers for premiums. High geopolitical tensions, inflation fears, and a weaker US dollar are fueling demand, with wealthy investors in Hong Kong and mainland China sharply increasing their gold allocations. Beyond trading, some are leasing gold for steady returns, engaging in cross-market arbitrage, or using it as collateral. However, compliance challenges, supply risks, and soaring prices could slow the frenzy within the next year.

Treasury Secretary Advocates for Aggressive Fed Rate Cut Amid Revised Jobs Data
Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent suggested the Federal Reserve should consider a larger 50 basis-point rate cut at its September meeting, arguing that revised job data shows the Fed could have started cutting rates earlier. In a Fox Business interview, Bessent noted that weaker employment figures for May and June only became apparent after the Fed’s July meeting. He also discussed Trump’s Fed board nominee Stephen Miran, expressing hope he’ll be confirmed in time for the September meeting, and mentioned that the search for Jerome Powell’s successor remains wide open.