Traders Load US-Bound Planes With Gold and Silver in Tariff Bet

(Bloomberg) -- Over the last few months, sealed wooden boxes have been arriving in the holds of commercial flights from London to New York, strapped up and tightly packed against tampering. When they land stateside, they are collected by trucks whose drivers, generally, don’t know what they’re hauling.

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What’s inside are stacks of silver bars that traders, fearing that tariffs from the US government are imminent, are loading onto planes to rush into America.

Gold is commonly flown between key global trading hubs including London, New York, Zurich, Hong Kong and Shanghai. Cheaper, bulkier silver is typically sent by ship.

But the Trump administration’s threats of tariffs have created unprecedented dislocations. US silver futures have spiked to a premium of more than $1 per ounce, making air freight viable, and sending traders rushing to get metals into the US before the new trade measures are announced, according to traders.

“It is highly, highly unusual,” Philip Newman, industry veteran and founding partner at the consultancy Metals Focus, said. “It’s the first time I’ve heard of that in terms of the London to New York route.”

Gold and copper are also pouring into the US. Futures have surged above their international benchmarks since President Donald Trump’s election victory in November, creating an opportunity for the handful of trading houses and banks that are capable of moving large volumes of metal into the US at short notice, and huge risks for investors who can’t.

Nearly 14 million ounces of gold, worth $38 billion, have flowed into the depositories of New York’s Comex futures exchange since election day, along with 45 million ounces of silver. Huge volumes of gold have been exported out of Switzerland, while the rush for bullion led to weeks-long queues to withdraw the metal from the Bank of England’s vault into the custody of private banks, according to people familiar with the matter.

Gold hit an all-time high this week, as traders looked for safe havens as the Trump administration’s tariffs loomed.

The rare trade flows reveal how the commodities industry is being upended by Trump’s trade policies, even before he makes good on repeated campaign pledges to impose hefty tariffs on trading foes and allies alike. He’s signaled that levies could come as soon as Feb. 1, creating a further incentive to fly metal into the US before the window of opportunity slams shut.