Global Stocks Tumble as Dollar Plunges to Five-Week Low While Gold Surges

Markets reel as traditional assets show cracks—just as crypto stands resilient.
Dollar's Demise
The greenback hits its weakest in over a month, sparking flight to safety. Gold's climbing—no surprise there—but smart money's already eyeing digital hedges.
Equity Exodus
Stocks are bleeding worldwide. If you're still waiting for the Fed to save you, maybe reconsider that strategy.
Golden Oldie
Gold's rally feels almost nostalgic—like betting on horse carriages when hyperloops are launching. Meanwhile, Bitcoin's sitting pretty, quietly doing what it does best: ignoring traditional market panic.
Another day, another reminder that legacy finance moves at glacial speed while crypto runs circles around it. But hey, at least gold looks pretty in a vault.
Hang Seng rallies, but Japan and Korea slide
The Hang Seng index in Hong Kong closed 2.17% higher at 25,617.42, led by a strong showing from Alibaba Group, which jumped 18.58%. CSPC Pharmaceutical Group surged 9.53% and WuXi Biologics ROSE 8.37%. On the mainland, the CSI 300 gained 0.6% and ended the session at 4,523.71, despite volatile trade.
Japan’s Nikkei 225 slid 1.24% to 42,188.79, weighed down by semiconductor losses. Advantest lost 7.92%, Disco Corporation dropped 7.71%, and Socionext fell 6.32%. The broader Topix also declined 0.39%, finishing at 3,063.19.
Over in South Korea, the Kospi lost 1.35%, ending at 3,142.93, while the Kosdaq slipped 1.49% to 785. Australia wasn’t spared either. The S&P/ASX 200 dropped 0.51%, closing at 8,927.70. Only India bucked the trend. The Nifty 50 gained 0.66% and the BSE Sensex climbed 0.6% as of early afternoon.
Trump tariffs overturned as European indexes hold steady
In the U.S., TRUMP took a legal hit on Friday after a Federal Appeals Court ruled that his 2023 “reciprocal tariffs” breached presidential authority. The court declared the sweeping levies on imports from dozens of nations unlawful.
Wall Street had ended last week in the red. The S&P 500 fell 0.64% to 6,460.26 but still locked in its fourth straight monthly gain. The Nasdaq Composite dropped 1.15% to 21,455.55, and the Dow Jones gave up 92.02 points to close at 45,544.88.
All three indexes responded to new inflation readings that showed price pressures remain stubborn. U.S. markets stayed closed Monday for Labor Day.
In Europe, stocks stayed mostly flat. Spain’s IBEX 35 slipped 0.25% to 14,898.5. The UK’s FTSE 100 added 0.27%, finishing at 9,212.53. Germany’s DAX rose 0.53% to 24,028.09, France’s CAC 40 added 0.44% to 7,737.67, and the STOXX600 ended up 0.39% at 552.31.
Currency markets saw the dollar continue its slide. The ICE U.S. Dollar Index dropped to 97.618, losing 0.16% on the day and notching a 2.2% monthly fall. The euro traded at 1.172, up 0.334%, while the pound sterling gained 0.18% to hit 1.353.
The euro/yen moved to 172.4, and the euro/sterling pair reached 0.866. The dollar/yen cross stayed flat at 147.00 after August’s 2.5% drop.
Meanwhile, the yuan held steady NEAR a 10-month high at 7.1326 per dollar. Central bank support and a strong stock market inside China helped stabilize the currency, even though the wider economy is still wobbling. The People’s Bank of China continued setting firm daily fixings, giving investors a signal that it won’t let the yuan slide further for now.
In metals, Gold rallied hard. Spot prices hit $3,486.86 per ounce, rising 1.2% as of 0641 GMT. Futures for December delivery moved up 1.1% to $3,554.60. The gains came as traders placed bigger bets on a Fed rate cut this month. Silver broke $40 for the first time since 2011, hitting $40.56. Platinum jumped 1.5% to $1,384.68. Palladium gained 0.8%, reaching $1,118.06.
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