Oil prices steadied on Tuesday but remained near four-year lows as a recovery in equity markets was outweighed by recession fears exacerbated by trade conflict between the United States and China, the world's two biggest economies. Brent futures were up 24 cents, or 0.4%, at $64.45 a barrel at 1224 GMT. U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude futures rose 31 cents, or 0.5%, to $61.01. The two benchmarks had slumped by 14% and 15% respectively on Monday after U.S. President Donald Trump's April 2 announcement of "reciprocal tariffs" on all imports. On Tuesday Beijing vowed not to bow to what it...
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the performance of the US Dollar (USD) against six major currencies, trades around 103.00 at the time of writing on Tuesday, after some comments from Secretary Scott Bessent. Over the past few days, the overall risk-off sentiment had rather devalued the Greenback substantially, though since the strong Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) released on Friday, the DXY has been climbing back. The question will be if the index can hold on to this recovery when more US data comes in. On the economic calendar front, some light data is set to be published. The National...
Gold prices rose back above $3,000 per ounce on Tuesday as a weaker U.S. dollar and escalating trade tensions between the world's two largest economies lifted demand for the safe-haven asset. Spot gold was up 0.8% at $3,007.21 an ounce by 08:44 a.m. ET (1244 GMT), moving away from a more than three-week low touched on Monday in a pullback from last week's record high of $3,167.57. U.S. gold futures gained 1.6% to $3,021.90. "Despite falling for three consecutive sessions, gold remains bullish with trade tensions and the prospect of lower U.S. interest rates boosting its allure," said...