Business
US Gold Futures Hit Record High After Tariffs on One-Kilo Bars
Gold futures surged to an all-time high on Friday after reports that the United States had imposed tariffs on imports of one-kilogram gold bars, a move seen as a potential game-changer in the precious metals market.
According to the Financial Times, the Trump administration has applied levies on both one-kilo and 100-ounce gold bars, reversing earlier expectations that such imports would remain exempt. The newspaper said it had reviewed a letter from the US Customs and Border Protection agency, dated July 31, outlining the new classification under a customs code subject to tariffs.
On the Comex, the world’s largest gold futures market, US gold futures rose 0.9% to $3,484.60 an ounce at around 11 a.m. CEST, after briefly touching a record $3,534.10 earlier in the session. The rally comes on top of an almost 34% rise in Comex futures so far this year, driven by heightened geopolitical tensions and a flight to safe-haven assets.
In April, Washington excluded gold, silver, and platinum from broader import duties, calming fears of a supply squeeze and temporarily lowering futures prices. Traders had been importing cheaper foreign gold to capitalise on price differences between US futures and global benchmarks. The latest decision has reignited concerns of tightening supply and potential market disruption.
Analysts say the move could push gold prices toward the $4,000 mark. “Sustained by factors like its safe-haven credentials and a weakening dollar in 2025 – this latest development will have gold bugs eyeing the $4,000 level,” said Danni Hewson, head of financial analysis at AJ Bell.
The tariff announcement also dealt a blow to Switzerland, one of the world’s largest precious metal hubs and a major supplier to the US. The country exported around $61.5 billion worth of gold to the US in the 12 months ending in June. The new duties follow last week’s imposition of a 39% tariff on Swiss exports, more than double the rate applied to European Union goods and nearly four times higher than tariffs on British exports.
Swiss President Karin Keller-Sutter and senior officials visited Washington earlier this week to negotiate a reduction in the levy, which is among the steepest introduced by the Trump administration. The current rate exceeds the 31% duty initially proposed in April under the so-called “Liberation Day” tariffs.
While Switzerland’s influential pharmaceutical sector remains exempt from the 39% rate, the sudden inclusion of gold bars in the tariff regime adds fresh uncertainty for a key export industry.
Market watchers say the combined impact of tariffs, a weaker US dollar, and geopolitical instability could keep gold prices elevated for the foreseeable future.
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