Gold prices fell sharply this week by 2.0% to
$3,286 per troy ounce, extending the decline to as much as 3.3% at the weekly
low of $3,245 — near the critical support zone at $3,230–3,250. This area has
proven technically and psychologically significant, marking a key battleground
for bulls and bears. The major driver of volatility has been U.S. trade policy.
After initially rallying on renewed tariff threats from President Trump, gold
reversed sharply when a U.S. Federal court blocked those tariffs, ruling they
exceeded presidential authority. Although the Trump administration filed an
immediate appeal, the uncertainty surrounding tariff enforcement significantly
reduced gold's safe-haven appeal, sending prices back down. Hawkish tones from
the FOMC Minutes reinforced expectations of policy caution, boosting the U.S.
Dollar and further pressuring gold. The DXY surged 0.8% to its highest since
May 19, while 10-year Treasury yields briefly climbed before retreating — a
classic headwind for non-yielding assets like gold.
Interestingly, institutional sentiment may be
shifting. Last week, the SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) recorded $388.3 million in net
inflows, ending a four-week streak of outflows. With these positions showing a
5.0% gain as of last Friday, large investors might reassess their stance
following the tariff reversal. Looking ahead, the second estimate of U.S. Q1
GDP is expected on Thursday and is likely to confirm a 0.3% QoQ contraction.
This would be broadly neutral for gold unless a significant deviation occurs.
On Friday, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — the Core PCE price index —
will be released. A softer-than-expected print would weaken the Dollar and
support gold prices. With expectations of disinflation, the release could
become a bullish pivot for precious metals.
From a technical perspective, prices are
likely to consolidate within the $3,250–3,350 zone in the short term,
especially as legal clarity over tariffs is awaited. A decisive breakdown below
$3,230 could open the path toward the broader downside target at $3,030–3,050.
On the other hand, a strong bounce and close above $3,350 would negate the
bearish momentum and potentially set up a retest of the $3,400–3,450 region.
Gold remains in a vulnerable technical posture, weighed down by shifting macro
signals and legal-political uncertainty. Traders are likely to wait for clearer
signals on both the court ruling's durability and upcoming macro data before
making strong directional bets. Near-term, range-bound trading between $3,250
and $3,350 appears most likely, with a bearish bias persisting unless new
catalysts favor gold.
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