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Gold Gets Hammered—Down 2% This Week as Traders Flee to Digital Havens

Gold Gets Hammered—Down 2% This Week as Traders Flee to Digital Havens

Published:
2025-05-30 09:20:11
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Another rough week for the boomer metal as Bitcoin ETFs siphon off demand.

Gold’s losing its luster—literally. The ’safe haven’ asset is bleeding out while crypto eats its lunch. Who needs shiny rocks when you’ve got blockchain?

Funny how the ’inflation hedge’ can’t even hedge against its own irrelevance. Maybe try adding an app?

Gold posts biggest weekly drop in two months, oil edges lower.

Gold Aug 25 price. Source: Yahoo Finance

Kelvin Wong, senior analyst at Oanda Asia Pacific Pte, said that the current sell-off was due to technical factors ahead of the metrics release. “The price action in gold has twice failed to break above the key near-term resistance level of $3,328 — both in the U.S. session yesterday and again early in the Asian session today,” he noted.

Gold is still considered a safe haven amid market uncertainties

Markets have been unsettled once again after a federal appeals court on Thursday granted TRUMP a temporary reprieve from a decision that had threatened to remove much of his planned tariffs.

Tensions with China have also resurfaced. U.S. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent described talks with Beijing as “a bit stalled.” Earlier in the week, the WHITE House said it would start cancelling some Chinese student visas and curb sales of chip-design software to Chinese firms, prompting a swift protest from Beijing.

Such uncertainty in the market is likely to keep some interest in the bullion. Earlier this week, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. also said that gold WOULD remain a part of the firm’s long-term portfolios as a defense against rising prices, alongside crude oil.

By 1:40 p.m. in Singapore, spot gold had trimmed losses but was still down 0.5% at $3,300 an ounce. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index inched higher after swinging the previous day. Other precious metals, including silver (SI=F), palladium (PA=F), and platinum (PL=F), all slipped lower.

Crude oil prices decline for the second consecutive week

Brent crude futures declined 21 cents (0.33%) to $63.94 a barrel by 06:26 GMT, while U.S. West Texas Intermediate crude lost 22 cents (0.36%) to $60.72. Both contracts have dropped about 1.3% since Monday, and the Brent July futures contract is due to expire on Friday.

Much of the pressure came from expectations that OPEC+ and its partners would approve another output hike on Saturday during a meeting.

Analysts at JPMorgan said the global surplus has increased to roughly 2.2 million barrels per day, a gap that may force prices lower, in order to restore balance. The analysts predict crude will trade NEAR current levels before easing into the high $50s by the end of the year.

Supply worries were compounded after Trump’s broad tariffs were reinstated on Thursday, overturning a lower-court order issued a day earlier. Crude, which is often considered a SAFE haven alongside gold, has now fallen more than 10% since Trump rolled out his “Liberation Day” tariffs on April 2.

At the same time, tensions deepened further after Washington told a wide range of companies to halt shipments of goods such as ethane and butane to China without a license, and revoked existing permits for some suppliers.

Even so, JPMorgan noted that global demand ticked up last week thanks to strong U.S. travel over the Memorial Day holiday. The bank estimates monthly demand growth at about 400,000 barrels per day as of May 28, roughly 250,000 barrels below earlier projections.

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