Wednesday, 08 April 2026
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RECENT NEWS
Gold falls below $4,000 as US–China trade thaw eases safe-haven demand

Gold falls below $4,000 as US–China trade thaw eases safe-haven demandGold price slides below $4,000 for the first time since mid-October, hitting a daily low of $3,971 as risk appetite improved due to easing tensions between the US and China in regard to the trade war. Nevertheless, expectations that the Federal Reserve (Fed) would resume its easing cycle could prompt investors to buy the yellow metal. Yellow metal slips nearly 3% despite firm Fed rate cut expectationsXAU/USD trades at $3,995, losing 2.80% amid a trading session that is also witnessing a weaker US Dollar and falling US...

Oil Steady as Traders Focus on Glut and Russian Crude Sanctions

Oil steadied after two-day drop as investors weighed signs of glut and the fallout from western sanctions on Russian producers. West Texas Intermediate traded near $61, while Brent closed below $66 on Monday. The amount of oil being shipped across the world's oceans hit a fresh record, a sign supplies are continuing to mount. In addition, OPEC+ may agree to add more production at a meeting this weekend. US sanctions against Russia's biggest oil companies — which lifted crude last week — were also in focus. Washington has floated a six-month deadline for Berlin to...

Gold Holds Near $4,000 as US-China Progress Damps Haven Demand

Gold clawed back some losses after plunging below $4,000 an ounce on Monday as progress in US-China trade talks sapped demand for haven assets. Bullion edged higher on Tuesday after tumbling 3.2% in the previous session as negotiators from Washington and Beijing said they'd struck a series of agreements on issues including tariffs and export controls. Treasuries moved lower even as traders stuck to bets that the Federal Reserve is set to loosen monetary policy this week, with the higher yields weighing on demand for non-interest bearing gold.  Gold has pulled...

Aussie Dollar Rises, US Dollar Weakens

The Australian dollar (AUD) rose to around $0.656 on Tuesday, its highest level in nearly three weeks. This increase was primarily due to the weakening US dollar (greenback). US market participants await the Fed's decision on Wednesday, and many have already set expectations that the benchmark interest rate will be cut by 25 basis points. Positive sentiment regarding the possibility of a US-China trade deal has also slightly reduced demand for safe-haven assets like the US dollar, giving the AUD more room to move. Domestically, the Australian market is now awaiting two important data:...

Oil Prices Plunge 2% As Investors Assess Russian Sanctions And OPEC+ Production Plans

Oil prices plunged 2% on Tuesday (October 28th), marking a third straight day of declines as investors assess the impact of US sanctions on Russia's two largest oil companies, as well as a potential OPEC+ plan to increase production. Brent crude fell $1.29, or 2%, to $64.33 per barrel at 08:56 GMT. US West Texas Intermediate crude fell $1.20, or 2%, to $60.11. "Traders are weighing progress in US-China trade talks and the broader supply outlook," ANZ said in a morning note. The lower prices come after Brent and WTI posted their biggest weekly gains since June last week, in response to US...