Gold prices have rallied 2.6% this week to
$3,322 per troy ounce, extending a powerful uptrend driven by geopolitical
uncertainty and growing expectations of monetary easing in the United States.
The metal has climbed 21% since November 2024, largely fuelled by sustained
buying from the People’s Bank of China amid escalating trade tensions with the
U.S.
According to a recent Bank of America survey,
42% of fund managers now expect gold prices to rise further in 2025, up sharply
from just 23% when prices hovered near $3,000 in March. The shift in sentiment
comes as the Federal Reserve edges closer to cutting interest rates, with
investors anticipating action as early as June following the S&P 500’s 21%
decline from its recent peak.
Despite signs of a stock market rebound,
expectations for monetary easing remain intact. An emergency Fed meeting last
week reportedly explored scenarios for rate cuts should equity markets resume
their slide. A further 5–10% drop in the S&P 500 could be the tipping
point, analysts suggest.
Investor positioning reflects growing
confidence in gold’s resilience. The SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) reported $2.03
billion in net inflows last week alone, as institutional players increased
their exposure following confirmation of softening U.S. inflation data. The
metal has surged 10% in the past ten days.
Technically, however, the rally may be
overextended. Some analysts warn of a potential correction back toward $3,000
per ounce if momentum fades, particularly if macroeconomic conditions shift.
Meanwhile, geopolitical uncertainty continues
to provide a bullish backdrop. President Donald Trump escalated rhetoric this
week, threatening to raise tariffs on Chinese imports to 245% unless Beijing
reduces its retaliatory levies. While the stance appears aggressive, analysts believe
both sides have little room for further escalation and may be inching toward
negotiations.
Still, the onset of trade talks could limit
gold’s upside. If the U.S. and China ease tensions, risk appetite would likely
return to equities, and the need for Fed intervention could diminish. That
could take the wind out of gold’s sails—at least temporarily.
©2000-2025. Todos los derechos reservados.
El sitio es administrado por Teletrade D.J. LLC 2351 LLC 2022 (Euro House, Richmond Hill Road, Kingstown, VC0100, St. Vincent and the Grenadines).
La información presentada en el sitio, no es una base para tomar decisiones de inversión y es proporcionada sólo con fines informativos.
La empresa no atiende ni presta servicio a clientes residentes en Estados Unidos, Canadá y los países incluidos en la lista negra del FATF.
La realización de operaciones comerciales en los mercados financieros con instrumentos financieros de margen, abre grandes oportunidades y permite a los inversores que estén dispuestos a correr riesgos a obtener altos rendimientos, pero al mismo tiempo conlleva un nivel de riesgo de pérdidas potencialmente alto. Por lo tanto, antes de comenzar a comercializar, se debe tomar de manera responsable a la cuestión de elegir la estrategia de inversión correspondiente, teniendo en cuenta los recursos disponibles.
Uso de información: al usar completamente o parcialmente los materiales del sitio, el enlace a TeleTrade como fuente de información es obligatorio. El uso de materiales en Internet debe ir acompañado de un hipervínculo al sitio teletrade.org. Importación automática de materiales e información del sitio está prohibida.
Para cualquier duda o pregunta, póngase en contacto con pr@teletrade.global.