Gold Bid at Highs as Trump Forces Tariff Debate Onto Davos’ Sidelines
Gold remains firmly bid near record highs as geopolitical risks flare once again, this time driven by President Trump’s latest tariff threats aimed squarely at Europe. With markets already on edge, the timing — just days ahead of the World Economic Forum in Davos — has added another layer of uncertainty to an already fragile global backdrop.
Rather than triggering panic, the renewed bout of headline risk has reinforced gold’s appeal as a defensive asset. Futures positioning, options markets and short-term technicals all suggest that while volatility risks remain elevated, investors are still treating pullbacks as opportunities rather than warnings — a theme that could persist as Davos headlines roll in.
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Trump’s Tariff Gambit Turns Davos Into a Headline Risk Event
Trump’s latest tariff threats look deliberately timed, landing just ahead of the World Economic Forum in Davos as Europe’s political leadership gathers in one place. With the continent’s decision-makers conveniently packed into a single Alpine ski town, the issue has been dragged front and centre — not in the formal sessions, but in the corridors where real pressure is applied.
EU officials are reportedly holding back on any immediate response, likely hoping quiet diplomacy can take some heat out of the situation. But that restraint also hands Trump the narrative. Whether the endgame is extracting concessions, boosting tariff revenues, or simply forcing Europe to engage on his terms, the leverage for now sits firmly with Washington.
Headline Risk Rises as Trump Heads to Davos
Trump isn’t operating from afar. He is attending Davos in person, alongside a record-size US delegation that includes Cabinet secretaries and senior advisers. Reports suggest he has already arrived and is active on the ground — ensuring trade tensions aren’t just debated in theory, but felt directly on the sidelines.
And that’s what turns Davos into a headline machine, especially when trade and geopolitics are already live issues.
Gold (GC) Futures Positioning | COT Report
Futures traders have grown progressively wary of gold’s rally ever since net-long exposure peaked back in September 2024. To then see prices rally a further 81% without them fully on board will have stung. Ordinarily, I’d treat that kind of divergence as a warning sign for a bearish reversal. But this time feels different. The forces driving gold higher appear bigger than what futures positioning alone can explain.
While gold has rallied hard, it hasn’t reached the near-parabolic extremes seen in silver. With gross-long exposure now slowly creeping higher, futures traders appear to be conceding they were wrong to fade the move. If the early weeks of 2026 have taught us anything, it’s that complacency isn’t an option. With geopolitical risks on the rise, gold looks well placed to continue thriving in an increasingly uncertain environment.
Source: LSEG, CFTC, CME
- The latest Commitment of Traders (COT) report shows large speculators and managed funds increased their gross-long exposure to gold futures by 34.1k contracts last week (+8% for large specs and +8.5% for managed funds)
- Gross longs have been trending higher since November, yet remain historically low
- Net-long exposure is therefore not at a sentiment extreme, with large specs long 251.2k contracts and managed funds long 134.7k contracts
- Gross shorts remain low across both groups
Ultimately, there still appears to be a meaningful pool of sidelined bulls who may be reconsidering a return to gold. That keeps gold firmly on a buy-the-dip watchlist for now, with a credible chance of a break above 5,000 later this year.
Gold Options Remain Supportive as Implied Volatility Stays Contained
If there were genuine concerns about a major pullback in gold, I’m yet to see them reflected in the options market. Implied volatility over the next week and month sits in the same ballpark and remains unremarkable by historical standards.
The 10-delta one-month risk reversal is rising alongside spot prices, signalling increasing call demand relative to puts. The same can be said for the 25-delta 10-month risk reversal. While the 25-delta one-week risk reversal remains marginally negative, it too is trending higher — pointing to a pickup in call demand at the shorter end.
As ever, it’s the rate of change that matters more than the absolute level. With implied volatility contained and no obvious surge in put demand, options markets continue to point to limited downside risk. That message aligns neatly with futures positioning, where exposure remains supportive rather than stretched.
And with gold happily bouncing along its 10- and 20-day EMAs within a well-established uptrend, the technicals are doing little to stand in the way of the bullish case.
Source: LSEG, CME
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-- Written by Matt Simpson
Follow Matt on Twitter @cLeverEdge
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