Gold prices rose 3.8% to $4,033 per troy ounce
this week, though such gains have almost become routine as the metal continues
setting fresh all-time highs nearly every other day over the past six weeks.
The latest record was reached on Wednesday at $4,059 per ounce. The rally
accelerated sharply from October 1, following the start of the U.S. government
shutdown and the release of weak ADP Nonfarm Payrolls data for September. Gold
broke above resistance at $3,780, jumping 2.0% to $3,835 in a single session,
which confirmed a move toward the next target at $3,860–$3,880 per ounce.
That level held briefly until Monday, when it
was decisively breached after Sanae Takaichi became Japan’s first female Prime
Minister. She is widely regarded as a supporter of accommodative fiscal and
monetary policy, leading markets to expect a pause in rate hikes by the Bank of
Japan and a slower pace of balance sheet reduction. This additional dovishness,
combined with growing political instability in France—where Prime Minister
Sébastien Lecornu resigned just one month into office, marking the third
government resignation this year—fueled further risk aversion and added support
for gold. The metal broke above $3,860–$3,880 and quickly advanced toward the $3,960–$3,980
resistance zone before pushing beyond $4,000 per ounce.
Technical overbought conditions are now
extreme, surpassing anything seen in gold’s modern trading history since the
1970s. Despite this, momentum remains strong, and even an extension toward
$4,300–$4,400 cannot be ruled out. The recently released minutes from the
Federal Reserve’s September FOMC meeting revealed intense internal debate but
also a fragile consensus favouring further rate cuts in 2025 amid a cooling
labour market. This outlook remains supportive for gold, though largely priced
in.
Meanwhile, U.S. President Donald Trump
announced a preliminary peace agreement between Israel and Hamas. Gold dipped
slightly on the news, though the broader uptrend remains intact. The current
rally began following the Hamas attack on October 7, 2023, and the subsequent
conflict in Gaza, leaving a significant open gap at $1,832 per ounce.
Markets now turn their attention to Fed Chair
Jerome Powell’s upcoming speech on Thursday. Investors will watch closely for
any signs of a softer stance amid weakening economic and labour market data.
Powell’s tone has eased in his past two appearances; if this continues, gold
may set another record and test resistance at $4,060–$4,080 per ounce. Large
investors have slightly reduced their exposure, with inflows into the SPDR Gold
Trust (GLD) ETF totalling $1.1 billion last week but showing $178.2 million in
outflows this week. Though modest, this may indicate growing caution among
major players who are beginning to take profits as the market reaches
historically stretched levels.
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