
Gold slumps as Trump tariffs roil markets, but it remains a safe-haven choice: analysts
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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.
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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.
Gary Ng, a senior economist at Natixis Corporate and Investment Bank, said the sell-off in gold was likely to be a short-term phenomenon.
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