Gold bounces but stocks struggle
Stock markets mostly struggled on Tuesday while gold and silver prices rebounded in fresh volatile trading.
Oil prices rose while Wall Street indices retreated, shrugging off passage of legislation to end a four-day partial US government shutdown.
The price of gold climbed more than seven percent but later traded near $4,950 per ounce. Last week it reached a record-high close to $5,600 before tumbling.
Gold is "heading for its biggest daily gain since 2008, as prices rebounded sharply following the steepest two-day decline in decades," said analyst Axel Rudolph at trading platform IG.
Silver surged more than 15 percent to $86 on Tuesday, still well short of the record near $120 it hit last week.
"A sense of calm descended after the precious metal auctions, opening the door for investors to buy on the dip," noted Richard Hunter, head of markets at Interactive Investor.
Gold and silver prices have been on a tear in recent months, benefitting from being seen as a safe haven investments during times of geopolitical tensions.
Wall Street's main equity markets wobbled, with the Dow striking a fresh all-time high before turning lower.
The Nasdaq Composite finished down 1.4 percent after spending almost the entire session in negative territory.
"The rotation away from tech began at the beginning of the year and it's kind of building on itself here," said Briefing.com analyst Patrick O'Hare.
"The tech sector had such strong outperformance last year and for several years. There are so much good news that has been priced into the stocks that there's really like zero room for error."
US President Donald Trump signed into law a congressional spending bill to fund government agencies while buying more time for lawmakers to negotiate over spending for the administration's controversial immigration crackdown.
Negotiations had broken down following the killing of two US citizens by federal agents in Minneapolis, the Minnesota city which has become the flashpoint for the Republican president's policies.
In Europe, early gains failed to hold. Frankfurt and London ended the day lower while Paris finished flat.
The euro and the pound rose against the dollar ahead of interest-rate decisions due Thursday from the European Central Bank and Bank of England.
Investors were also keeping an eye on earnings from major companies this week, with particular attention on the tech sector and planned investment in artificial intelligence.
Shares in Palantir, a data and analytics firm that has extensive ties with the US government, jumped 6.8 percent, while robotics firm Teradyne surged 13.4 percent.
Shares in Disney dipped 0.2 percent after it named Josh D'Amaro, head of its theme parks division, to replace Bob Iger as chief executive when he steps down next month.
Asian equities trading was more positive, with sentiment boosted by a rally on Wall Street on Monday following forecast-beating manufacturing data.
That fed through to Asia, where Tokyo closed with a gain of 3.9 percent on Tuesday.
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