Thursday, May 22, 2025 | Dhu al-Qaadah 23, 1446 H
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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Gold hits record, 22-carat crosses RO41 in Oman

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Hong Kong - Bullion hit another record Tuesday while the dollar steadied and equities mostly fell as Donald Trump's latest salvo against Federal Reserve boss Jerome Powell added fuel to fears about the central bank's independence.


According to Vijay Valecha, Chief Investment Officer of Century Financial, Gold rose by 1.55 percent and is trading at 3,480. The metal reached an all-time high of 3,500 on Tuesday.


On the fundamental front, Beijing's comments warned other countries against signing trade agreements with Washington that harm China, emphasizing that global economies risk being drawn into a trade war between the two nations. Additionally, Trump again pressured Powell, stating, “If Powell doesn’t cut rates, the economy might slow down”. This raised doubts over the Fed’s monetary policy independence, which paired up with the bets of Fed rate cuts this year, pushed the US Dollar to its weakest point since April 2022."


On the technical front, gold has been trading in a strong uptrend, with the 9- and 21-period EMAs at 3,468 and 3,442, respectively. On the hourly chart, the commodity has strong support at 3,440 and resistance at 3,555.



Gold prices in Oman


22k - RO41.200


24k - RO44.050


18k- RO32.600



With the US tariff blitz still causing ructions on global trading floors, investors are now dealing with the added worry that the US president will try to remove the country's top banker, whom many fear could hammer already fragile market confidence.


Trump took a swipe at Powell last week for his warning that the sweeping levies would likely reignite inflation, saying his "termination cannot come fast enough" and adding that "I'm not happy with him. I let him know it and if I want him out, he'll be out of there real fast, believe me". While that raised eyebrows, the Republican tycoon sent shivers through markets Monday by calling on the Fed boss again to make pre-emptive cuts to interest rates and calling him a "major loser" and "Mr. Too Late".


He said on his Truth Social platform that there was "virtually" no inflation as energy and food costs were well down and pointed to the several reductions by the European Central Bank. The outbursts have fanned concern that Trump is preparing to oust Powell, with top economic adviser Kevin Hassett saying Friday the president was looking at whether he could do so.


Panicked Wall Street investors once again dumped US assets, with all three main indexes ending down around 2.5 percent on Monday.


"The first volley on Thursday had little market reaction, but Monday's second barrage has seen an intensification of the 'sell America trade'," said National Australia Bank's Tapas Strickland. "Whether or not President Trump is legally able and willing to move against the US Fed, the jousting underscores the loss of US exceptionalism and the very real policy risk for investors." The rush for safety saw gold hit yet another record above $3,457, and while the dollar steadied after the previous day's selloff, it remained under pressure against its major peers. Stocks swung between gains and losses on the first full day of business after the Easter break. Hong Kong, Sydney, Taipei, Jakarta, Wellington, and Manila dropped, while Shanghai, Singapore, and Seoul edged up. However, analysts warned of another rout if Trump were to try to fire the Fed boss, which many said could cause a crisis of confidence in the US economy.


"Were Powell to be fired, the initial reaction would be a huge injection of volatility into financial markets, and the most dramatic rush to the exit from US assets that it is possible to imagine," said Pepperstone strategist Michael Brown. "Lower, much lower, equities; Treasuries sold across the board; and the dollar falling off a cliff. "Any sign of the longstanding, independent nature of the Fed coming under threat would see investors across the globe selling every single US-based asset that they have, and also poses the genuinely scary prospect of upending the entire way in which the global financial system operates."


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