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Gold's Relentless Ceiling Test Shows A Market That Wants Higher, But Not Yet
(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Gold spent the past week knocking on the same door and getting pushed back every time.
Spot prices hovered around $4,040–$4,060 an ounce on Monday morning, barely changed from Friday, even after a year-to-date gain of more than 50 percent and an October record above $4,380. The rally has paused, not collapsed.
Under the surface, demand still looks powerful. Central banks have lifted gold 's share in their reserves from roughly one eighth to more than one fifth in just a few years, often as a hedge against heavy debt and experimental monetary policy.
Exchange-traded funds keep adding metal, with several months of strong inflows and assets at record highs. Chinese and Indian buyers remain active, even after some local tax incentives were trimmed.
At the same time, new corporate players - including stablecoin issuers - have started to behave like mid-sized central banks. Yet every attempt to break cleanly above the $4,100 zone meets a wall of selling.
Dollar Strength Blunts Gold's Momentum
After such a steep rise, funds that bought lower are taking profits into strength. A firmer dollar and slightly better US data have cooled expectations of rapid rate cuts, reducing the urgency to pile into traditional havens.
Some fast money has rotated into equities and speculative tech, leaving fewer aggressive buyers to chase new highs in bullion. The charts tell the same story.
On weekly candles, gold now sits directly on its five-period moving average, the rail that guided the parabolic leg since late summer.
A decisive close below that line would signal that the runaway phase is over and a deeper correction toward the 20-week average is possible.
Daily and four-hour charts show tight ranges and fading momentum: repeated spikes to $4,080–$4,100, quick reversals, and narrowing volatility bands.
For cautious savers and institutions, this stalemate still underlines a simple point. As long as governments keep stretching budgets and flirting with easy money, a higher floor for gold looks less like a speculative bet and more like insurance that refuses to get cheaper.
Spot prices hovered around $4,040–$4,060 an ounce on Monday morning, barely changed from Friday, even after a year-to-date gain of more than 50 percent and an October record above $4,380. The rally has paused, not collapsed.
Under the surface, demand still looks powerful. Central banks have lifted gold 's share in their reserves from roughly one eighth to more than one fifth in just a few years, often as a hedge against heavy debt and experimental monetary policy.
Exchange-traded funds keep adding metal, with several months of strong inflows and assets at record highs. Chinese and Indian buyers remain active, even after some local tax incentives were trimmed.
At the same time, new corporate players - including stablecoin issuers - have started to behave like mid-sized central banks. Yet every attempt to break cleanly above the $4,100 zone meets a wall of selling.
Dollar Strength Blunts Gold's Momentum
After such a steep rise, funds that bought lower are taking profits into strength. A firmer dollar and slightly better US data have cooled expectations of rapid rate cuts, reducing the urgency to pile into traditional havens.
Some fast money has rotated into equities and speculative tech, leaving fewer aggressive buyers to chase new highs in bullion. The charts tell the same story.
On weekly candles, gold now sits directly on its five-period moving average, the rail that guided the parabolic leg since late summer.
A decisive close below that line would signal that the runaway phase is over and a deeper correction toward the 20-week average is possible.
Daily and four-hour charts show tight ranges and fading momentum: repeated spikes to $4,080–$4,100, quick reversals, and narrowing volatility bands.
For cautious savers and institutions, this stalemate still underlines a simple point. As long as governments keep stretching budgets and flirting with easy money, a higher floor for gold looks less like a speculative bet and more like insurance that refuses to get cheaper.
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