Group 1 - The surge in energy prices has led investors to worry that the Federal Reserve may delay interest rate cuts due to inflation rebound pressures, resulting in a cooling of previously crowded gold long positions and a significant profit-taking by investors, causing international gold and silver prices to decline last week [2][9] - The U.S. stock indices experienced a broad decline last week, with the Dow Jones falling by 3.01%, the S&P 500 down by 2.02%, marking the largest weekly drop since October of the previous year, and the Nasdaq decreasing by 1.24% [5] - The military conflict in the Middle East has significantly pushed up international oil prices, with New York oil prices rising by 35.63% and London Brent oil prices increasing by 27.88% last week [7][9] Group 2 - As of Monday (9th), international oil prices continued their strong upward trend, with New York oil prices opening above $100 per barrel for the first time since the outbreak of the Russia-Ukraine military conflict in 2022, briefly touching $110 per barrel during trading [11] - The surge in oil prices has put pressure on U.S. stocks, with investors concerned that rising energy prices will impact consumer spending and corporate investment, potentially leading the Federal Reserve to delay interest rate cuts [14] - Key monthly inflation data, including the February Consumer Price Index (CPI) and January Core Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) Price Index, is set to be released this week, with expectations that the February CPI will not rebound sharply due to tightening consumer spending and lower used car prices [16]
金价下跌,银价追跌!
中国能源报·2026-03-09 03:58