Gold prices held firm Wednesday after jumping to an all-time high in the previous session, as investors hunkered down and awaited details of U.S. President Donald Trump's tariff plans.
Spot gold rose 0.6% at $3,128.41 an ounce, as of 0827 GMT. U.S. gold futures gained 0.4% at $3,159.10.
Bullion has been a preferred investment choice with economic and geopolitical uncertainties running high. Spot prices are now trading over $400 higher than they were before Trump took office in January and hit a record peak of $3,148.88 on Tuesday.
For weeks, Trump has been promoting April 2 as "Liberation Day" and he is expected to introduce sweeping new tariffs on multiple countries at a White House Rose Garden event at 2000 GMT. These tariffs could slow economic growth and escalate trade disputes, experts say.
"Gold is currently getting all the support from (the) geopolitical and macroeconomic front. If Trump's reciprocal tariffs are not going to be benign and be aggressive, gold prices will rally again," said ANZ Commodity Strategist Soni Kumari.
Anecdotes from the Institute for Supply Management survey on Tuesday offered a gloomy assessment of U.S. business conditions, with U.S. manufacturing contracting in March after growing for two straight months.
UBS's base case forecast for gold for the year is $3,200/oz, "but our upside case could see gold even going to $3,500 if we get a sharp economic slowdown," said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.
On the data front, markets are waiting for the ADP employment report due later in the day and non-farm payrolls on Friday, for any hints on the U.S. Federal Reserve's policy path.
"Gold will once again be an outperformer within the wider metals complex, a scenario that would be put into limbo only if the U.S. Fed proceeds to raise interest rates instead," analysts at BMI said.
Among other metals, spot silver added 0.5% to $33.90 an ounce, platinum fell 0.2% to $977.97, and palladium firmed 0.2% to $985.70.
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