Advertisement

Gold slumps as Trump tariffs roil markets, but it remains a safe-haven choice: analysts

Spot price climbed 40 per cent in a year, but it has now fallen 5.1% from peak in less than a week

Reading Time:2 minutes
Why you can trust SCMP
0
The spot price of gold has fallen by about 5.1 per cent since April 3. Photo: Reuters

The price of gold has tumbled amid shock waves from the tariff war between the United States and China, but the precious metal remains the safe-haven asset of choice in times of volatility, analysts said.

The spot price of gold climbed 40 per cent in a year to hit an all-time high of US$3,167.77 an ounce on April 3, but US President Donald Trump’s announcement of his long-promised “reciprocal tariffs” then saw the price fall by about 5.1 per cent to US$3004.57 as of 11am on Wednesday.

Analysts attributed the drop to short-term sell-offs by traders needing to cover losses from other asset classes.

Alex Chiu, senior exchange-traded fund (ETF) strategist at asset management firm Value Partners, said gold could be used to mitigate losses when the wider market was experiencing “abnormal volatility”.

“During market downturns … brokers may initiate a margin call that sells off gold to cover losses in other positions,” he said, adding that gold was an easily liquidated asset.

07:26

Stock markets in Asia resume slump as hefty US tariffs on China take effect

Stock markets in Asia resume slump as hefty US tariffs on China take effect

Trump’s tariff onslaught has triggered a steep downturn in the world’s financial markets. Hong Kong’s benchmark Hang Seng Index slumped 13.2 per cent on Monday, wiping out HK$194 billion (US$25 billion) in value in its biggest decline since October 1997.

Advertisement