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Gold’s Resilience Shines as Bond Jitters and Fiscal Fears Cloud Other Safe Havens

  • robertbelanger7
  • 7 days ago
  • 2 min read

Gold’s Resilience Shines as Bond Jitters and Fiscal Fears Cloud Other Safe Havens

Gold is ending the week on a confident note, buoyed by deepening worries over sovereign-debt markets and America’s swelling deficit. While government bonds have long been the go-to refuge in times of stress, investors are now questioning their safety—and many are rotating into bullion as a hedge against both inflation and political risk.


On 23 May, Kitco’s Neils Christensen reported that fading faith in global bonds—especially in Europe, where traders quietly expect the ECB to keep printing money—has pushed gold back above $3,300 an ounce. Analysts warned that any hint of renewed quantitative easing could accelerate the shift from sovereign debt into precious metals.


A few hours earlier, market veteran Jim Wyckoff noted a burst of safe-haven buying ahead of the long U.S. Memorial Day weekend. Spot prices climbed more than 3 percent this week as the dollar slipped and equity volatility ticked up, giving gold its best weekly performance since early April.


Yet the metal’s appeal isn’t just about today’s headlines. Christensen’s evening roundup asked whether gold will be “the last safe haven standing” when traders return next week to digest fresh U.S. core-PCE inflation data and a string of Treasury auctions. Several strategists argued that even a hawkish Fed would struggle to dent bullion’s bid so long as worries over heavy U.S. issuance—and the recent Moody’s downgrade—linger.


Still, Thursday’s Bloomberg dispatch shows gold is not invincible: prices briefly eased when the dollar firmed and long-dated Treasury yields popped after another weak bond sale. The quick pullback underscores a push-and-pull narrative—dollar strength can slow, but not yet stop, the broader flight to bullion.


For now, the takeaway is clear: with confidence in government paper wobbling and geopolitical tensions still high, gold’s dual role as portfolio ballast and inflation hedge looks as compelling as it has all year.


Sources:


Christensen, Neils. “Don’t Tell the ECB, but Gold Shines as Faith in Global Bonds Wavers.” Kitco News, 23 May 2025, www.kitco.com/news/article/2025-05-23/dont-tell-ecb-gold-shines-faith-global-bonds-wavers.


Wyckoff, Jim. “Gold Price Solidly Up on Safe-Haven Buying Ahead of Long U.S. Weekend.” Kitco News, 23 May 2025, www.kitco.com/news/article/2025-05-23/gold-price-solidly-safe-haven-buying-ahead-long-us-weekend.


Christensen, Neils. “Will Gold Be the Last Safe-Haven Standing Next Week?” Kitco News, 23 May 2025, www.kitco.com/news/article/2025-05-23/will-gold-be-last-safe-haven-standing-next-week.


“Gold Holds Decline as U.S. Government Debt, Dollar Make Gains.” Bloomberg, 22 May 2025, www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2025-05-22/gold-holds-decline-as-us-government-debt-dollar-make-gains.



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