Tuesday, 02 January 2024 12:17 GMT

Gold Hovers Near Record Highs As Traders Wait For The Fed


(MENAFN- The Rio Times) Key Points

  • Gold is trading around $4,210–4,220 after a week of sideways moves just below record highs.
  • Expectations of imminent US rate cuts, a weaker dollar and heavy central-bank buying remain the core drivers.
  • Technicals show an extended but intact uptrend, with growing warnings that any policy surprise could trigger a sharp correction.

    Gold starts this Monday near $4,21x an ounce, barely below the recent peaks above $4,250. Over the past seven days it has drifted in a tight $4,180–4,250 band, as investors mark time before the US Federal Reserve's meeting this week.

    The overnight Asian session kept to that script: a softer dollar nudged prices modestly higher, but nobody wanted to take a big position before hearing from Washington.

    The fundamental backdrop remains simple. US data show a cooling labour market and gentler inflation. That combination has markets pricing a strong chance of a rate cut, which lowers real yields and makes non-yielding assets like gold more attractive.

    For fiscally stretched governments, cheaper money is a relief; for savers and more cautious investors, it is another reason to park capital in something they hope politicians cannot print away.



    Around the world, the physical and derivatives markets are humming. COMEX volumes remain heavy, with open interest high as funds hedge Fed risk.

    In India, benchmark futures near ₹1,30,400 per 10 grams and firm retail prices signal steady demand even after the rally.

    In Europe and the UK, bullion priced in euros and sterling is close to record levels. China's central bank continues to add to its reserves, extending a buying streak that underlines how seriously emerging countries now take reserve security.

    Institutional flows point the same way. Gold ETFs have enjoyed six consecutive months of net inflows and London vault holdings are back above 8,900 tonnes.

    The big marginal buyers today are central banks and long-term allocators, not short-term speculators looking for a quick headline trade. Technically, the 4-hour chart shows consolidation in a narrow box, with momentum indicators flattening around neutral.

    The daily and weekly charts still point to a powerful uptrend from below $2,800 last year, but with overbought signals starting to cool. Support sits in the low $4,100s, resistance near and above $4,250.

    If the Fed delivers the easy money many expect, gold could punch higher again. If it blinks, the metal that governments cannot devalue may be the first asset to remind them that markets still can.

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  • The Rio Times

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