
Gold ticks higher with focus on US inflation data
Spot gold was up 0.1% at $3,346.94 per ounce, as of 0151 GMT. U.S. gold futures were flat at $3,355.60.
"Gold has shown in the past that it is an asset of choice when tariff tensions are ratcheted up, and the precious metal's move towards $3,350 is evidence of this pattern playing out again," KCM Trade Chief Market Analyst Tim Waterer said.
"However, higher treasury yields and USD appreciation have created headwinds...For gold to make further progress towards $3,400 a pullback in the USD or treasury yields may be required in the absence of heightened geopolitical events."
U.S. President Donald Trump on Saturday threatened to impose a 30% tariff on imports from Mexico and the European Union starting on August 1, after weeks of negotiations with the major U.S. trading partners failed to reach a trade deal.
Traders' focus now shifts to U.S. consumer price data for June, due at 1230 GMT on Tuesday.
Economists polled by Reuters expect headline inflation to increase to 2.7% on an annual basis, up from 2.4% in the prior month. Core inflation is expected to rise to 3.0%, from 2.8%.
Trump on Monday renewed his attacks on Fed Chair Jerome Powell, saying interest rates should be at 1% or lower. Markets are pricing in 50 basis points of rate cuts by year-end, with the first reduction expected in September.
Gold, often considered as a safe-haven asset during times of economic uncertainties, tends to do well in a low-interest-rate environment.
Elsewhere, spot silver gained 0.3% to $38.24 per ounce, after hitting its highest level since September 2011 on Monday.
"Silver is benefitting from supply concerns and growing industrial demand. Also, gold's rise over the past 18 months has had investors looking elsewhere for value and silver has been one of the metals to rise as a result," Waterer said.
Platinum rose 0.3% to $1,368.30 and palladium edged 0.1% higher to $1,194.52.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Gizmodo
23 minutes ago
- Gizmodo
Trump Releases His All-American Action Plan for AI
Donald Trump on Wednesday revealed 'America's AI Action Plan,' a collection of more than 90 policy recommendations designed to ensure that the country remains competitive when it comes to the development of artificial intelligence, some of which would loosen regulations around the development of data centers and encourage rapid adoption of the technology across different sectors. 'We believe we're in an AI race,' David Sacks, the White House AI czar, said during a call with reporters. 'We want the United States to win that race.' The 23-page plan is broken down into three primary pillars that the Trump administration sees as key to speeding up AI development: 'Accelerate AI Innovation,' 'Build American AI Infrastructure,' and 'Lead in International AI Diplomacy and Security.' Trump plans to get the ball rolling on the plan by signing several executive orders on Wednesday, per Bloomberg, including a directive to use the US International Development Finance Corporation and the Export-Import Bank to encourage American technology be deployed globally and another that will require any large language models used by the federal government to be neutral and 'unbiased.' What Trump's plan primarily amounts to is rolling back regulations. For instance, the report calls to 'reject radical climate dogma and bureaucratic red tape' that it believes will interfere with expanding AI infrastructure, including building data centers and new power plants to support them, plants that Trump has already declared are a-okay to be coal-powered. The administration is also using the plan to get its say on state-level AI laws, since its attempt to pass a 10-year ban on states passing their own regulations for AI got stripped from the One Big, Beautiful Bill. Within the plan, there is a call to withhold federal funding from any state that enacts 'burdensome AI regulations.' Given the lack of detail as to what amounts to a burden, the administration will surely flex that muscle at will. The plan calls for siccing the Federal Communications Commission on the states by putting the agency in charge of evaluating 'whether state AI regulations interfere with the agency's ability to carry out its obligations and authorities under the Communications Act of 1934.' There is also a fair amount of undoing what little AI policy came before within the 'Action Plan.' While the Biden administration only issued a single executive order related to AI, it did start ramping up federal agencies to address potential concerns related to the new technology. That seems to be over now. Trump's plan calls for reviewing all Federal Trade Commission investigations initiated by the Biden administration to make sure they 'do not advance theories of liability that unduly burden AI innovation.' The Trump administration also plans to revisit the National Institute of Standards and Technology's AI Risk Management Framework to 'eliminate references to misinformation, Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion, and climate change.' The Action Plan does call on AI models to be open-sourced, so that's nice. But the rest of the plan seems to be carte blanche for AI companies to do as they see fit, with few requirements or regulations to protect the public. It also shows little interest from the federal government in looking into what potential harm that it might cause.


CNBC
24 minutes ago
- CNBC
Trade optimism lifts stocks, and Broadcom shares shake off a reported wrinkle in Meta's chip plans
Every weekday, the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer releases the Homestretch — an actionable afternoon update, just in time for the last hour of trading on Wall Street. Markets: The S & P 500 is hitting another record high off more trade agreements. Late Tuesday, President Donald Trump announced what he called a "massive deal" with Japan that included a reduced tariff rate of 15%, including for cars and car parts, and an investment of $550 billion in new capital in the United States. Stocks got an extra boost shortly before noon following a Financial Times report that the U.S. and European Union are close to finalizing a trade deal that would impose a 15% tariff on most goods, down from the 30% rate both sides have threatened if no deal is reached by Aug. 1. Recent trade deals and reports suggest that tariffs on imports to the U.S. are here to stay. Still, that hasn't stopped the market from climbing to new highs. Tariffs may sticking around, but the market is liking the lowered rates and pledges from foreign governments to buy more U.S. goods and invest in the United States through what Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has now called an "innovative financing mechanism." Chip shift? : Shares of Club name Broadcom started Wednesday lower after a publication called DigiTimes Asia reported that fellow portfolio member Meta Platforms has chosen MediaTek over Broadcom to make its new 2 nanometer custom chip. If true, the news would be somewhat surprising since Meta Platforms and Broadcom have close ties. Broadcom not only partners with the social media giant on its MTIA accelerator , but CEO Hock Tan also serves on Meta's board. However, MediaTek also has a history with Meta, having collaborated on custom silicon for augmented reality glasses — so this new reported partnership isn't surprising and doesn't indicate any tension with Broadcom. Still, Meta branching out to new partners doesn't change our thesis on Broadcom and its larger AI accelerator opportunity, and shares eventually shook off their earlier losses to trade higher by about 0.75% in the afternoon. Broacom's AI business is exploding, with growth expected to sustain into its next fiscal year and demand accelerating in the back half. Looking ahead, Broadcom expects to increase its list of hyperscale customers for AI chips from three — widely believed to be Meta, Alphabet, and TikTok parent ByteDance — to seven, driving growth for years to come. Up next: There are no portfolio holdings reporting after the closing bell on Wednesday. But there are plenty of key reports, including Google parent Alphabet , Tesla , ServiceNow , IBM , Chipotle , and United Rentals . Before the opening bell on Thursday, we'll see earnings from Club names Honeywell and Dover . A few other companies scheduled to report are American Airlines , Blackstone , Dow Inc , Southwest Airlines , Flex and Keurig Dr. Pepper . (See here for a full list of the stocks in Jim Cramer's Charitable Trust.) As a subscriber to the CNBC Investing Club with Jim Cramer, you will receive a trade alert before Jim makes a trade. Jim waits 45 minutes after sending a trade alert before buying or selling a stock in his charitable trust's portfolio. If Jim has talked about a stock on CNBC TV, he waits 72 hours after issuing the trade alert before executing the trade. THE ABOVE INVESTING CLUB INFORMATION IS SUBJECT TO OUR TERMS AND CONDITIONS AND PRIVACY POLICY , TOGETHER WITH OUR DISCLAIMER . NO FIDUCIARY OBLIGATION OR DUTY EXISTS, OR IS CREATED, BY VIRTUE OF YOUR RECEIPT OF ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED IN CONNECTION WITH THE INVESTING CLUB. NO SPECIFIC OUTCOME OR PROFIT IS GUARANTEED.


The Verge
24 minutes ago
- The Verge
How Trump's war on clean energy is making AI a bigger polluter
At an AI and fossil fuel lovefest in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania last week, President Donald Trump — flanked by cabinet members and executives from major tech and energy giants like Google and ExxonMobil — said that 'the most important man of the day' was Environmental Protection Agency head Lee Zeldin. 'He's gonna get you a permit for the largest electric producing plant in the world in about a week, would you say?' Trump said to chuckles in the audience. Later that week, the Trump administration exempted coal-fired power plants, facilities that make chemicals for semiconductor manufacturing, and certain other industrial sites from Biden-era air pollution regulations. If Trump has his way, the next generation of data centers will run dirtier than the last. It isn't enough to kill renewables and pave the way for more coal and gas plants to power energy-hungry AI data centers. Trump is also obsessed with tossing out environmental protections. 'It costs much more to do things environmentally clean,' Trump claimed in an interview with Joe Rogan in October 2024. Upon his appointment to head the EPA (or, rather, run it into the ground), Zeldin said that he would be focused on 'unleash[ing] US energy dominance' and 'mak[ing] America the AI capital of the world.' The EPA announced thousands of layoffs on on July 18th, gutting its research and development arm. 'It costs much more to do things environmentally clean.' At the Pennsylvania Energy and Innovation Summit, Trump attempted to take credit for private investments totaling around $36 billion for data center projects and $56 million for new energy infrastructure. The ceremony itself was mostly pomp and circumstance, but it's telling that the Trump administration says it wants to make Pennsylvania a new hub for AI data centers. It's a swing state that Republicans are eager to move into their column, but it's also a major coal and gas producer. Sitting atop a major gas reserve, fracking in Pennsylvania (as well as Texas) helped usher in the 'shale revolution' in the 2000s that made the US the world's leading gas producer. That was supposed to start changing under former President Joe Biden's direction. He set a goal for the US to get all its electricity from carbon pollution-free sources by 2035. And in 2022, he signed the Inflation Reduction Act, which was full of tax incentives to make it cheaper to build out new solar and wind farms, as well as other carbon-free energy sources. If it had stayed intact, the law was expected to reduce US greenhouse gas emissions by around 40 percent this decade. The law came at a crucial time for tech companies, which were expanding data centers as the AI arms race picked up steam. Electricity demand in the US is rising for the first time in more than a decade, thanks in large part to energy-hungry data centers. Google, Amazon, Microsoft, Meta, and other tech giants all have their own climate goals, pledging to shrink their carbon footprints by supporting renewable energy projects. But Trump is making it harder to build those projects in the US. Republicans voted to wind down Biden-era tax incentives for solar and wind energy in the big spending bill they passed this month. The bill will likely decrease electricity generation capacity in 2035 by 340 GW, according to one analysis, with the vast majority of losses coming from solar and wind farms that will no longer get built. All these new data centers still need to get their electricity from somewhere. 'They won't be powered by wind,' Trump said during the summit, repeating misleading talking points about renewable energy that have become a cornerstone of new climate denial. He signed an executive order in April, directing the Commerce, Energy, and Interior Departments to study 'where coal-powered infrastructure is available and suitable for supporting AI data centers.' Trump, backed by fossil fuel donors, campaigned on a promise to 'drill, baby, drill' — a slogan that he doubled down on again at the event. He also referenced the Homer City Generating Station, an old coal plant that's reopening as a gas plant that will power a new data center. The deals announced at the summit include Enbridge investing $1 billion to expand its gas pipelines into Pennsylvania and Equinor spending $1.6 billion to 'boost natural gas production at Equinor's Pennsylvania facilities and explore opportunities to link gas to flexible power generation for data centers.' 'They won't be powered by wind.' Data centers are a 'main driver' for a boom in new gas pipelines and power plants in the Southeast, according to a January report from the Institute for Energy Economics and Financial Analysis (IEEFA). The Southeast is home to 'data center alley,' a hub in Virginia through which around 70 percent of the world's internet traffic flows through. Even if AI models become more efficient over time, the amount of electricity they're currently projected to demand could lock communities across the US into prolonged reliance on fossil fuels as utilities build out new gas infrastructure. Zeldin's job now is essentially to remove any regulatory hurdles that might slow down that growth. From his first day in office, 'it was clear that EPA would have a major hand in permitting reform to cut down barriers that have acted as a roadblock so we can bolster the growth of AI,' as Zeldin wrote in a Fox News op-ed last week. 'A company looking to build an industrial facility or a power plant should be able to build what it can before obtaining an emissions permit,' he added. And after moving to roll back pollution regulations for power plants, the Trump administration is now reportedly working on a rule that would undo the 2009 'endangerment finding' that allows the EPA to regulate greenhouse gas emissions under the Clean Air Act. Zeldin also writes that when it comes to Clean Air Act permits for polluters it considers 'minor emitters,' the EPA will only meet 'minimum requirements for public participation.' An AI Action Plan that the White House dropped on July 23rd proposes creating new categorical exclusions for data center-related projects from the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), a sunshine law that mandates input from local communities on major federal projects. The plan directs agencies to identify federal lands for the 'large-scale development' of data centers and power generation. There are other factors at play that could derail Trump's fossil-fueled agenda, including a backlog for gas turbines in high demand. Solar and wind farms are still generally faster to build and a more affordable source of new electricity than coal or gas, and we could see some developers rush to complete projects before Biden-era tax credits fully disappear. One early bright spot for renewables was the fact that data centers used to train AI are theoretically easier to build close to far-flung wind and solar projects. Unlike other data centers, they don't need to be built near population centers to reduce latency. They could also theoretically time their operations to match the ebb and flow of electricity generation when the sun shines and winds blow. But so far, things are shaping up differently in the real world. 'It's just a race to get connected as quickly as possible,' says Nathalie Limandibhratha, senior associate US power at BloombergNEF. Data center developers are also concerned that if they build facilities specifically to train AI closer to renewable energy, they could be left with stranded assets down the road. They'd rather keep building data centers close to population centers where they can repurpose the facility for other uses if needed. They also get more bang for their buck running 24/7, so data centers are leaning toward around-the-clock electricity generation from gas and nuclear energy (and nuclear energy has more bipartisan support than other sources of carbon-free energy). 'There's no question right now that AI is driving greater fossil fuel use in the United States and really setting us back in terms of climate change,' says Cathy Kunkel, an energy consultant at IEEFA. Tech giants Google and Amazon made announcements coinciding with the Pennsylvania summit committing to purchasing hydropower and nuclear energy, respectively. But their most recent sustainability reports show that their greenhouse gas pollution is still growing, taking them further away from their climate goals of reaching net zero emissions. 'If [tech companies] wanted to meet their sustainability goals, they could do so,' Kunkel says. 'They're getting a free pass, obviously, from the Trump administration.'Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All by Justine Calma Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All AI Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Analysis Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Climate Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Energy Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Environment Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Policy Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Politics Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Regulation Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. See All Science