Summary
- US equities held steady despite the OECD downgrading its global growth projections, highlighting growing market fatigue.
- Base metals stayed firm despite a stronger dollar
- Gold and silver softened slightly, erasing some of yesterday's gains.
Macro
Despite continued bearish sentiment over the impact of tariffs on both domestic and global growth, US equities were little changed today, highlighting growing market fatigue towards tariff-related risks and downgrade concerns. The OECD cut its global growth projections for 2025 and 2026 to 2.9% for both years - down 0.2 and 0.1 percentage points, respectively, from its March projections. The organisation cited tariff-related uncertainty and diminished business confidence as key factors dampening investment while also warning that rising protectionism is contributing to inflationary pressures. The dollar index bounced back from yesterday’s lows but remained below the 100 threshold at 99.10. The 10-year US Treasury yield held firmly at 4.44%.
Base Metals
Base metals remained stable today despite a strengthening dollar, indicating a lack of strong fundamental or macroeconomic drivers to push prices beyond their current ranges. Copper tested the $9,600/t resistance level once again but failed to gain momentum to break higher, finishing slightly above this level at $9,634/t. Likewise, aluminium continued to fluctuate around the $2,450/t mark, capped within the $2,400-2,500/t range. Lead and zinc held their nerve at $1,985/t and $2,706.50/t, respectively, while tin saw strength, rising to $31,378/t.
Precious Metals and Oil
Gold and silver softened, erasing some of yesterday’s gains, with gold edging lower to $3,348/oz and silver slipping to $34.50/oz. Conversely, oil prices extended their gains as supply disruptions caused by wildfires in Canada countered OPEC’s recent decision to increase the supply, causing WTI and Brent to strengthen to $63/bbl and $65/bbl, respectively.
All price data is from 03.06.2025 as of 17:30