Gold prices climbed toward historic highs, trading over $2,780 per ounce as President Trump’s softened stance on China tariffs triggered a dollar decline. In a Fox News interview, Trump expressed reluctance to impose levies on China, causing the dollar to drop 0.7% and making gold more attractive to international buyers.
The precious metal has gained nearly 3% this week, bolstered by safe-haven demand amid economic uncertainty surrounding the new administration’s policies.
While Trump’s comments on European tariffs and calls for immediate interest rate cuts added complexity to the market outlook, UBS strategist Joni Teves suggests investors will likely maintain gold positions as a safe haven and portfolio diversifier, even during periods of dollar strength.

Oil Crashed 11%. Gold Went Up. That Tells You Everything.
Oil crashed 11% on Friday when Iran reopened the Strait of Hormuz. Gold went up. That rare divergence — oil down, gold up, same catalyst — signals that gold’s rally is driven by monetary forces, not geopolitical ones. The war premium left oil. The monetary premium stayed in gold. Here is what that means for precious metals investors watching the Fed’s next move.




