The International Monetary Fund (IMF) lowered its global growth forecast for next year and warned of rising geopolitical risks, from wars to trade protectionism. Its latest outlook predicts that economic output will expand by just 3.2% in 2025, slower than the 3.3% it previously estimated. It left its projection for this year unchanged at 3.2%. Looking to 2025, the IMF bumped up the outlook for US growth by 0.3 percentage points, thanks to the country’s strong consumer base. But it bumped down the eurozone’s outlook by the same amount, blaming the persistent drag in Germany and Italy’s manufacturing sectors. The price of gold hit another all-time high last week, touching $2,760 an ounce on Wednesday, putting its year-to-date gain at over 30%. Several factors have been driving the rally. First, interest rates are falling in most of the world, shrinking the opportunity cost of owning gold, which holds value but doesn’t generate income. Second, central banks are snapping up the metal to diversify their US-dollar-heavy reserves. Third, heightened economic and geopolitical risks are boosting demand for safe-haven assets, like gold. China unveiled some of its sharpest cuts to lending rates in years, as policymakers sought to boost the economy to get it closer to the country’s 5% year-end growth target. On Monday, the People’s Bank of China said that the country’s one-year prime rate, which is set by big Chinese banks and acts as a benchmark for consumer and business loans, would fall to 3.1% from 3.35% – the steepest drop on record. Meanwhile, the five-year loan prime rate, which underpins mortgages, would be lowered to 3.6% from 3.85%. |