Home Business NewsGold hits a fresh record amid divergence with bond yields and the dollar

Gold hits a fresh record amid divergence with bond yields and the dollar

23rd Sep 25 10:03 am

Some interesting divergence is opening up. TIPS yields and the dollar bottomed around 16 September and have bounced quite a bit since, with the 10yr TIPS yield up over 10 bps and DXY up about 1%.

This ought to be negative for gold and while it did sell off briefly in tandem, itโ€™s since rocketed past where it was to a fresh record high this morning with spot gold to $3,759. It comes as nominal US Treasury yields climbed again yesterday, with the benchmark 2-year treasury yield this morning at a more than two-week high near 3.60% and the 10yr yield also climbing to near 4.15% this morning, though this is still below the low of the May-September range.

Gold is rallying because of physical demand from central banks but mainly because investors donโ€™t buy monetary policy decisions being made chiefly to lower debt interest payments by governments that spend way beyond their means.

Wall Street closed higher despite a soft open โ€“ all three major indices posting record intra-day and closing highs.. AI is the driver of course โ€“ this time Nvidiaโ€™s plan to invest $100bn in OpenAI, the company behind ChatGPT. NVDA rose almost 4%, while fellow AI name Oracle jumped another 6%, taking its gain this month to 45%, after naming two new co-CEOs.

Apple rallied 4% on strong iPhone demand signs. Wedbush raised its price target to $310, while JPMorgan raised it to $280, both citing better-than-expected sales. Apple plans to boost production of the entry-level iPhone 17 model by 30% following strong pre-orders.

European stock markets opened higher, with the FTSE 100 up about 0.25% to 9,250 and Dax and Cac both up around 0.5%. Taiwan and South Korea notched fresh record highs overnight, while Tokyo was closed for a holiday.

Trumpโ€™s new Fed governor, Stephen Miran, called for rates to be much lower. Surprise, surprise; heโ€™s the outlier. Fed chair Jay Powell will give a more balanced view later today.

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