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Gold prices climbed to an all-time high on Tuesday, extending gains to a sixth session on the back of a weaker dollar and rising bets of a US interest rate cut this month.
Gold prices climbed to an all-time high on Tuesday, extending gains to a sixth session on the back of a weaker dollar and rising bets of a US interest rate cut this month.
Spot gold was up 0.5% at US$3,493.99 (RM14,781) per ounce, as of 0348 GMT, after hitting a record high of US$3,508.50 earlier in the session. US gold futures for December delivery gained 1.4% to US$3,564.40.
"A corollary of the weaker economic backdrop and expectations of US rate cuts is boosting precious metals," said Kyle Rodda, Capital.com's financial market analyst.
"Another factor is the festering confidence crisis in dollar assets because of US President Donald Trump's attack on Fed independence."
Trump has criticised the US Federal Reserve and its chair Jerome Powell for months for not lowering rates, and recently took aim at Powell over a costly renovation of the central bank's Washington headquarters.
On Monday, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the Fed is and should be independent, but added that it had "made a lot of mistakes" and defended Trump's right to fire Fed governor Lisa Cook over allegations of mortgage fraud.
Traders are currently pricing in a 90% chance of a 25-basis-point Fed rate cut on Sept 17, according to the CME FedWatch tool.
Non-yielding gold typically performs well in a low-interest-rate environment.
Rate-cut expectations and worries over the Fed's independence have weighed on the US dollar, which is languishing near a more than one-month low against its rivals, making gold less expensive for overseas buyers.
Data on Friday showed that the US personal consumption expenditures price index rose 0.2% month-on-month, and 2.6% year-on-year, both in line with expectations.
Investors are now looking forward to the US non-farm payrolls data due on Friday, to determine the size of an expected Fed rate cut later this month.
Elsewhere, spot silver gained 0.1% to US$40.71 per ounce, after hitting its highest since September 2011 in the previous session.
Platinum gained 1% to US$1,415.70, and palladium fell 0.7% to US$1,129.03.
Chinese President Xi Jinping will host his country's largest-ever military parade this week, as he seeks to recast Beijing as the custodian of a post-U.S. international order at a time of deep geopolitical uncertainty.More than 20 world leaders including Russia's Vladimir Putin and reclusive North Korean leader Kim Jong Un will gather in Beijing for the September 3 "Victory Day" event marking 80 years since Japan's defeat at the end of World War Two.
The highly choreographed spectacle aims to project China's military might and diplomatic clout amid doubts over the United States' global role, as President Donald Trump slashes foreign aid, retreats from international institutions and wages a sweeping trade war on allies and rivals alike.The unprecedented joint appearance of Xi flanked by Putin and Kim overseeing the showcase of cutting-edge equipment like hypersonic missiles and drones, may well be the defining image of the parade, an "Axis of Upheaval" defying the West.
For Kim, who crossed into China on his special train early on Tuesday, it will be his first major multilateral event and the first time a North Korean leader has attended a Chinese military parade in 66 years."The presence of Vladimir Putin, (Iran's) Masoud Pezeshkian, and Kim Jong Un underscores China's role as the world's leading authoritarian power," said Neil Thomas, a Chinese politics expert at the Asia Society Policy Institute's Center for China Analysis.
The increase in leaders from Central Asian, West Asian and Southeast Asian countries attending this year's parade compared to the last one in 2015 highlight's Beijing's progress in regional diplomacy, Thomas added.Proceedings will kick off at 9 a.m. (0100GMT), according to China's official Xinhua news agency.Slovakian Prime Minster Robert Fico and Serbia's Aleksandar Vucic, both critical of sanctions on Russia over its war in Ukraine, are the only Western leaders attending.
Trump, whose own June military parade drew the largest nationwide protests since his return to power, has repeatedly talked up his close relations with Xi, Putin and Kim but has failed to make any major diplomatic breakthroughs.
Earlier this week, Xi rallied leaders of developing nations to advocate for a more equal, multipolar world and promote the "correct historical perspective" of World War Two at a regional security forum in the port city of Tianjin.The parade too is part of a "memory war" in which China and Russia offer an alternative history to a Western narrative they believe underplays their role in fighting fascist forces, the Brookings Institution wrote in a paper last week.Xi has cast the war as a major turning point in the "great rejuvenation of the Chinese nation" in which it overcame Japan's invasion to become an economic and geopolitical powerhouse.
While some residents have requested patriotic and military-themed haircuts ahead of the parade, such enthusiasm may be not be shared by all ordinary Chinese people.Downtown Beijing has been virtually paralysed by security measures and traffic controls in the weeks leading up to the parade.Nationwide, local governments have mobilised tens of thousands of volunteers and Communist Party members to monitor for any signs of potential unrest ahead of the parade, estimates based on online recruitment notices show.
Taiwanese officials on Monday estimated Beijing was spending $5 billion - the equivalent of 2% of its entire defence budget - on the parade.
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