
Silver (XAG/USD) attracts some sellers during the Asian session on Thursday and erodes a part of its weekly gains registered over the past three days. The white metal currently trades above mid-$32.00s, down 0.35% for the day, though the near-term bias seems tilted in favor of bullish traders and supports prospects for a further appreciating move. From a technical perspective, the XAG/USD showed some resilience below the 100-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA) last Friday. Moreover, oscillators on the daily chart have again started gaining positive traction on the daily chart and validate...
Gold price (XAU/USD) trades with a positive bias during the Asian session on Thursday and remains close to a one-week high touched on the previous day, though it lacks follow-through buying. Investors remain concerned about US President Donald Trump's tariff measures, which continue to act as a tailwind for the safe-haven bullion. Furthermore, the possibility of an earlier-than-expected interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve (Fed) and the bearish sentiment surrounding the US Dollar (USD) turn out to be other factors lending support to the non-yielding yellow metal. However, a generally...
Gold rose above $2,920 per ounce on Thursday, near record highs, supported by a weaker US dollar and safe-haven demand amid US trade policy uncertainties. President Donald Trump temporarily exempted US automakers from his 25% tariffs on Canada and Mexico for one month and signaled openness to further adjustments. A US official also suggested Trump may remove the 10% tariff on Canadian energy imports that meet trade agreement rules. However, fresh US tariffs on Canada, Mexico, and China have triggered retaliatory measures, and China has filed a revised WTO consultation request over the...
The Australian Dollar (AUD) holds ground for the fourth consecutive day on Thursday. The AUD/USD pair gains ground as the US Dollar (USD) remains subdued amid improved risk sentiment, following another shift in US President Donald Trump's tariff strategy. The White House announced on Wednesday that President Trump is temporarily exempting automakers from newly imposed import tariffs on Mexico and Canada for one month. Additionally, Trump is considering excluding certain agricultural products from tariffs on Canada and Mexico, according to a Bloomberg reporter on X late Wednesday. Source:...