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Gold hovered near $3,998 per ounce, steadying after a volatile week marked by China’s new tax oversight, U.S. silver-tariff discussions, and mounting pressure on the Federal Reserve to clarify its policy stance amid a historic government shutdown. The metal has moved within its tightest range since September, fluctuating only about $100 high-to-low, and sits roughly 8.6% below October’s record high of $4,381 per ounce. This consolidation reflects a tug-of-war between safe-haven demand and a firmer dollar that continues to test investors’ conviction.
Beijing’s newly announced value-added tax reform marked one of the most aggressive structural changes to China’s bullion market in over a decade. The new rule requires banks and gold retailers to link their systems directly to the national tax network, giving authorities real-time visibility over all bullion transactions. The Shanghai Gold Exchange closed the week near ¥919 per gram, unchanged from the prior week, suggesting stability despite tighter regulation. Analysts inside China note that the move formally separates gold’s dual role as a financial asset and consumer product, improving transparency while likely raising costs for jewelry manufacturers and retail buyers. The World Gold Council anticipates this change will temper short-term jewelry sales but strengthen long-term investment flows as households treat gold more like a financial asset.
Across the Pacific, the U.S. Geological Survey added silver to its 2025 “critical minerals” list, setting the stage for potential Section 232 import tariffs under national-security provisions. The move aligns silver with copper and metallurgical coal in Washington’s campaign to secure domestic supply chains. Traders fear that if tariffs materialize, they could distort global bullion trade by redirecting silver flows away from U.S. refiners. Yet, despite the political noise, silver (XAG/USD) held near $48.25 per ounce, about 10.8% below last month’s record peak above $54, while gold (XAU/USD) maintained composure around $3,995.
The narrowing volatility band highlights a temporary equilibrium between bulls and bears. On one side, risk-averse investors continue allocating to gold as the shutdown delays key data releases; on the other, a resilient U.S. dollar and mildly higher Treasury yields cap momentum. The 10-year yield rose slightly to 4.089%, while the Dollar Index (DXY) edged up to 99.81, trimming some speculative positions in the metal. Still, total daily gold volume averaged $67.2 billion, showing strong institutional participation even in a sideways tape.
The macro driver remains the Federal Reserve’s rate-cut trajectory. According to the CME FedWatch Tool, the probability of a December rate cut now stands at 67%, down from 90% earlier in the month, after the Challenger report revealed 153,074 job cuts in October—triple September’s total and the worst October reading since 2003. With official employment data frozen by the shutdown, private reports have become the only guidepost for policymakers. The uncertainty around inflation and labor conditions amplifies gold’s appeal as a non-yielding hedge against both monetary missteps and macro stagnation.
Spot gold (XAU/USD) trades comfortably above its 50-day moving average of $3,878.37, preserving a short-term bullish bias. Primary support sits at $3,928.68 and $3,886.46, while the broader floor remains the $3,846.50 pivot. A breakout above $4,046.60 would open the door to the next resistance band at $4,133.95–$4,192.36, an area of dense option open interest and prior selling pressure. Conversely, a decisive close below $3,846 would negate the uptrend and trigger momentum-based liquidation toward $3,750.
The prolonged U.S. government shutdown, now the longest in modern history, has paralyzed federal data collection, leaving traders without official benchmarks. This “information blackout” reinforces gold’s role as a crisis proxy, especially with market chatter of stagflation returning to the fore. Inflation remains sticky even as output slows, and with the Fed’s real policy rate near neutral, the metal benefits from diminishing real yields. Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee remarked that the lack of data “accentuates the need to move cautiously,” effectively signaling a pause. Investors have translated that caution into renewed allocation toward tangible assets.
Gold’s stability near $4,000 per ounce continues to deliver record cash flow for producers. Perseus Mining Ltd. reported $837 million in cash and bullion with zero debt as of September 2025, ensuring flexibility to hedge at favorable levels. The company’s management maintains downside protection via put options, securing margins even if prices dip toward $3,000.
Integra Resources Corp., operating the Florida Canyon heap-leach mine, guides 70,000–75,000 ounces for 2025 and channels proceeds to its DeLamar Project, now entering feasibility. Its long-term plan values production at a conservative $2,175/oz assumption, rendering the current market near $4,000 almost double its base case.
Cabral Gold Ltd. advances construction in Brazil’s Cuiú Cuiú District, targeting 25,000 ounces annually at an AISC of $1,210/oz. At today’s prices, that translates to nearly $3,000 profit per ounce or $70 million annual free cash flow on just $37.7 million in initial capex—a margin profile unmatched in the junior space.
Meanwhile, U.S. Gold Corp. progresses its CK Gold Project, fully permitted and designed for a gold-to-copper revenue split of roughly 80/20. Its February 2025 PFS estimated AISC at $937/oz, positioning it as one of North America’s most efficient upcoming mines.
A stronger dollar pressures global miners that report in local currencies but can also generate offsetting benefits. Serabi Gold and Cabral Gold in Brazil benefit from a weaker real, which boosts local-currency revenue while tempering input inflation. Serabi expects 44,000–47,000 ounces in 2025 with steady margins, citing favorable FX trends. Chief Executive Mike Hodgson** noted that “the combination of high gold prices and real-to-dollar dynamics has created an economic tailwind for Brazilian operations.”
North American newcomers are leveraging existing infrastructure to scale efficiently. i-80 Gold Corp. in Nevada, now transitioning from developer to mid-tier producer, recorded 8,400 ounces sold in Q2 2025 at an average realized price of $3,301, generating $28 million in revenue. As it refurbishes the Lone Tree Autoclave, expected online by 2028, recovery rates could rise from 55–60% to 92%, nearly doubling operating leverage. In Ontario, West Red Lake Gold Mines successfully restarted the Madsen Mine, producing 12,800 ounces in Q1-Q3 2025 with ambitions to exceed 100,000 ounces by 2029.
The March 2025 Executive Order on mineral independence has accelerated permitting in the U.S., reducing project timelines for Nevada-based developers. This domestic push may offset global trade disruptions caused by China’s tax reform or potential silver tariffs. The synergy between policy and commodity demand underpins a long-term bullish structure for gold: while tariffs might distort short-term pricing, they indirectly validate bullion’s strategic value as a secure asset class.
Broader precious metals mirrored gold’s consolidation. Platinum (XPT/USD) fell 2% to $1,557/oz, palladium (XPD/USD) slid 4.6% below $1,400/oz, and silver (XAG/USD) stabilized near $48.25/oz. Liquidity shortages in London’s white-metal markets have widened spreads, but the relative strength of gold underscores its dominance as the default store of value.
On the chart, momentum indicators suggest accumulation near current levels. The Relative Strength Index holds near 54, neutral but tilting positive, while stochastic oscillators remain above oversold territory. Open interest in COMEX gold futures has risen 5% week-on-week, implying fresh long exposure rather than liquidation. Options skews show growing demand for upside strikes around $4,100–$4,200, indicating traders still expect an eventual breakout once the Fed path clarifies.
Institutional flows show rotation rather than exit. Gold ETFs saw modest inflows this week after two consecutive weeks of redemptions, hinting that large investors view the sub-$4,000 region as an attractive accumulation zone. With the Dollar Index capped below 100 and real yields near 1.7%, the opportunity cost of holding gold remains historically moderate. The key narrative has shifted from inflation hedge to policy-risk hedge—gold now functions as insurance against data opacity, fiscal uncertainty, and political intervention.
The structure of XAU/USD remains robust. Prices above $3,878 preserve the bullish bias, and safe-haven flows continue amid policy paralysis. With supply from key mining regions steady, and demand from central banks and ETFs stabilizing, the market appears positioned for another upward leg once macro clarity returns.
Verdict: BUY / BULLISH — The data justifies a Buy stance on Gold (XAU/USD). The confluence of tightening U.S. labor conditions, rate-cut repricing, and structural geopolitical risk reinforces the case for holding and expanding gold exposure. Short-term consolidation between $3,920–$4,050 is likely, but a confirmed breakout above $4,046.60 targets $4,192–$4,250, while downside risk remains cushioned above $3,846.
For the second consecutive session, the 78.6% Fibonacci retracement at $4.41 has capped upside, just shy of the 161.8% projected target of the rising ABCD pattern at $4.45. This creates a defined $4.41–$4.45 resistance band. The extended top channel line runs straight through the heart of the current four-day consolidation range as well, adding another indicator showing of overhead supply.
The intraday reversal today strongly favors an inside day close heading into next week, fully contained within a developing four-day topping pattern. A drop below Friday’s $4.27 low would flash immediate weakness, but a bearish reversal only confirms on a decisive break beneath the four-day range support at $4.18.
Natural gas continues to demonstrate resilience near the highs while repeatedly challenging resistance, reflecting sustained buyer interest. This dynamic raises the possibility that one more push higher could materialize before any pullback unfolds. And when correction does arrive, it may remain shallow and short-lived. This is not a prediction, merely a scenario to keep in view.
Strength reasserts on any rally above the $4.42 trend high established Friday, with the $4.45 ABCD completion as the immediate next objective. A clean, decisive advance through $4.45 would signal the rising trend retains momentum and may have additional upside legs ahead.
First dynamic support arrives at the 10-day moving average, currently $4.01 and rising. Just below sits the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement at $3.94, converging with the original rising channel top line—previously resistance and now an untested potential support zone following the recent breakout above it.
The $4.41–$4.45 resistance zone holds the near-term key. Persistent failure here likely forces a deeper test of support the four-day range toward $4.18, with $4.01–$3.94 as the follow-on support cluster. A breakout above $4.45, however, validates continuation within the broader channel and opens higher targets. The inside day resolution may provide the next critical directional signal.
The gold market reclaimed ground on Thursday, with spot XAU/USD trading near $4,012 per ounce, up 0.8% intraday, after rebounding from an early Asian-session dip to $3,970. The yellow metal has stabilized above the $4,000 psychological threshold, defying recent profit-taking and positioning shifts, as macro forces—from a weakening dollar to record central bank demand—reassert gold’s dominance as the most resilient asset of 2025.
Gold’s immediate rebound was triggered by the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) slipping 0.3% to 106.04, down from a four-month high earlier this week, and the 10-year Treasury yield declining over 5 basis points to 4.106%, while the 2-year yield slid to 3.578%. This easing in yields restored appetite for non-yielding assets such as gold, which surged back above $4,000 for the first time since late October.
The broader catalyst came from deteriorating U.S. labor data. The Challenger, Gray & Christmas report revealed 153,074 job cuts in October, the highest October total since 2003, amplifying concerns over a slowing U.S. economy and reinforcing speculation of renewed Federal Reserve easing into early 2026. Although the ADP report posted a surprise +42,000 job gain, the private data’s optimism was offset by a 37-day federal shutdown delaying official statistics. This combination of mixed labor signals and fiscal paralysis has created a volatile yet gold-supportive environment.
Technically, gold is attempting to clear a critical resistance area near $4,046.60, which corresponds to the October 31 swing high. A successful breakout above this zone would activate the 50%–61.8% Fibonacci retracement range between $4,133.95 and $4,192.36, unlocking potential upside targets at $4,200 (UBS base case) and $4,700–$5,000 in extended scenarios.
Support remains solid between $3,867.95 and $3,846.50, anchored by the 50-day moving average and prior double-bottom pattern formed at $3,928.68 and $3,886.46. As long as price action holds above these pivot levels, the primary trend remains bullish, even amid short-term consolidations.
From a momentum standpoint, RSI readings near 54–56 on the daily chart indicate a recovery from oversold conditions observed last week. Volume analysis confirms renewed accumulation, with COMEX futures open interest rising 2.4% after a week of heavy liquidation. This shift marks an early re-entry of institutional traders after October’s correction.
Institutional sentiment across global banks remains overwhelmingly bullish despite the recent drawdown. UBS, in its November 3 report, reaffirmed a base target of $4,200/oz and an optimistic path toward $4,700/oz in Q1 2026, citing lower real rates, weaker dollar prospects, and persistent geopolitical risk. Strategist Sagar Khandelwal emphasized that “outside of technical factors, there is no fundamental justification for the sell-off.”
ING’s Ewa Manthey echoed the stance, stressing that “key supports, including central bank and safe-haven demand, remain fully intact.” ING projects an average price of $4,000 in Q4 2025 and $4,100 in Q1 2026, with downside “limited and short-lived.” The Dutch bank sees 70% odds of a December Fed rate cut, which would enhance gold’s non-yielding appeal.
Meanwhile, Goldman Sachs expects $5,055 by Q4 2026, Bank of America targets $5,000 with $4,400 average, and HSBC forecasts $5,000 by end-2026, all citing de-dollarization and record physical demand. The World Gold Council (WGC) reported 1,313 tonnes of global demand in Q3 2025, a record quarter driven by 222 tonnes of ETF inflows and 316 tonnes of bar and coin investment—a 47% year-over-year surge.
Gold’s long-term floor is underpinned by massive institutional and sovereign accumulation. Central banks purchased over 800 tonnes of gold in 2024, following the record 1,136 tonnes in 2022, while UBS now forecasts 900–950 tonnes for 2025. This buying spree, led by China, India, and Turkey, reflects a broader structural trend of de-dollarization as nations hedge against U.S. fiscal uncertainty and sanctions exposure.
ETF participation confirms the same pattern. In Q3 alone, inflows reached $24 billion, the strongest quarter in history, with North America leading with 346 tonnes and Europe adding 148 tonnes. Cumulative 2025 inflows now exceed 619 tonnes ($64 billion). The World Gold Council’s data shows retail bar and coin demand at 316 tonnes, while jewelry demand, though down 19% YoY to 371 tonnes, increased 13% in value to $41 billion, underscoring how high prices are not deterring overall wealth allocation to gold.
Across Asia, physical markets remain firm. In India, gold prices climbed on November 6 to ₹11,225 per gram for 22K and ₹11,786 per gram for 24K, up ₹40–₹42 day-over-day, confirming that consumer demand remains strong despite elevated levels. In China, premium spreads between Shanghai and London gold prices exceeded $65/oz, indicating supply tightness amid record retail buying during Diwali and year-end festival demand.
This strength in Asia offsets temporary softness in Western ETF reallocation, keeping the global demand base balanced. With India’s imports surging and jewelry fabrication margins stable, analysts expect South Asian markets to remain pivotal in absorbing supply even if speculative flows waver in futures.
The U.S. government shutdown, now in its 37th day, has distorted economic data visibility and delayed official inflation and employment reports. Traders are forced to rely on private indicators like ADP and ISM, both of which have shown resilience. However, with core CPI still above 3.5% YoY and fiscal uncertainty persisting, real yields are trending lower—a historically bullish condition for gold.
Fed fund futures currently price a 63% probability of a December rate cut, down from 90% last week, but markets broadly agree that the Fed’s hiking cycle is over. Lower real yields combined with global geopolitical strains—from Middle East tensions to Europe’s energy crunch—create an environment favoring continued safe-haven demand.
Applying Fibonacci projections to the August–October uptrend suggests a 100% extension target near $5,000/oz and a 161.8% level at $5,600/oz, implying over 40% potential upside from current levels. The $3,800–$3,900 area remains a historically strong accumulation zone, confirmed by multiple retests and alignment with the 50-day EMA.
Volatility in COMEX gold options has contracted to 13.8% implied volatility, near a three-month low, signaling that the market may be coiling for a major directional move. Option traders are positioning for a volatility breakout, with call open interest surging at the $4,200 and $4,500 strikes—consistent with institutional forecasts of a year-end rally.
Sentiment analysis shows 70% of institutional portfolios remain underweight gold, leaving room for reallocation. UBS explicitly recommended “buying the dip,” advising 3–7% portfolio exposure to gold and select exposure to mining equities, which they expect to outperform bullion over the next six months due to operating leverage.
From a trading perspective, maintaining long exposure above $3,950 with stop-loss below $3,870 and profit targets at $4,130–$4,190 aligns with short-term bullish momentum. Options traders are accumulating December $4,100 calls and selling $3,900 puts, reflecting confidence that the downside remains contained.
All structural indicators point toward strength rather than fragility. The correction from $4,381 to $3,970 represented a mere 8.4% decline, well within normal retracement parameters following a 47% YTD surge. With Treasury yields falling, ETF inflows accelerating, and central banks accumulating, the medium-term trajectory remains decisively bullish.
Gold’s immediate bias: BUY above $3,950, target range $4,200–$4,700, and extended objective $5,600 by late 2026. The longer the government shutdown persists and liquidity tightens in equities, the stronger the magnet toward higher gold valuations becomes.
XAU/USD remains the cornerstone of global risk hedging—and as fundamentals align, it’s again proving why every dip in the world’s oldest asset becomes a launchpad for the next rally.
Natural gas prices began forming new bullish waves, to settle near $4.415 level, affected by the bullish momentum of the main indicators, to keep its stability within the bullish channel that appears in the above image.
We expect attacking 38.2%Fibonacci correction level at $4.750, to form the initial main target in the current trading, noting that surpassing this barrier will open the way for recording extra gains in the near period by its rally towards $4.910 and $5.150.
The expected trading range for today is between $4.300 and $4.750
Trend forecast: Bullish
Copper price remains affected by the negative factors, which forces it to delay the positive attempts and provide some corrective trading by its stability near $4.9000, reminding you the continuation of providing negative momentum by stochastic might force it to retest the extra support at $4.7500, and breaking this support will force it to suffer extra losses that might extend towards $4.5400 and $4.3200.
While activating the bullish track requires forming strong bullish waves, to settle above $5.2000 level, then attempts to record extra gains by its rally towards $5.3200 and $5.5100.
The expected trading range for today is between $4.7500 and $5.0500
Trend forecast: Bearish
Platinum price didn’t change anything due to its fluctuation between the levels of the current sideways track, that are represented by $1605.00, and $1525.00, which represents a key support for reducing the chances of suffering extra losses.
Note that stochastic attempt to provide positive momentum might push the price to form bullish trading, to attempt to renew the pressure on the previously mentioned barrier, to find an exit to record extra gains in the upcoming period, while breaking the support and holding below it will force it to suffer several losses that begin at $1485.00.
The expected trading range for today is between 985.00 and 1040.00
Trend forecast: Bullish
Silver (XAG/USD) extends its recovery for the third consecutive session on Thursday, trading near $48.70, up nearly 2.40% on the day, as buyers return after defending the $45.00-$46.00 demand zone.
The rebound follows a sharp correction that saw the metal fall nearly 16% from its all-time high of $54.86 earlier this month to a one-month low of $45.56, before stabilizing above its 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA).
The latest leg higher appears to be driven more by technical buying than fresh fundamental catalysts, as improved risk sentiment surrounding the US-China trade truce has, in fact, limited safe-haven demand for precious metals.
However, some support stems from the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) interest rate cut on Wednesday, though the upside remains capped after markets interpreted it as a hawkish cut following Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s signal that further policy easing is unlikely, saying that “a further reduction in the policy rate at the December meeting is not a foregone conclusion.”
From a technical perspective, the daily chart continues to show a broader uptrend despite the recent sharp correction. On the upside, immediate resistance is seen in the $49.00-$49.50 zone, which has capped gains in recent sessions and coincides with the 21-day SMA. A decisive close above this area would strengthen the case for a resumption of the uptrend.
On the downside, initial support lies at Thursday’s low of $47.26, followed by $45.56, the October 28 low, which closely aligns with the 50-day SMA, a region where dip-buying interest has recently emerged. A break below this zone would risk extending the corrective pullback toward the next key area around $44.50-$43.00.
The Relative Strength Index (RSI) has recovered to 53 after briefly dipping below the neutral 50 mark, suggesting that bearish momentum has slightly eased while buyers are beginning to regain control. Overall, Silver maintains a constructive near-term outlook, with the broader trend still intact as long as the metal holds above $45.50.
Meanwhile, the Fixed Range Volume Profile drawn from the September 18 low of $41.20 to the all-time high of $54.86 shows the Point of Control (POC) around $48.20-$48.50, indicating a critical area of volume-based support where recent consolidation has been concentrated.
Silver is a precious metal highly traded among investors. It has been historically used as a store of value and a medium of exchange. Although less popular than Gold, traders may turn to Silver to diversify their investment portfolio, for its intrinsic value or as a potential hedge during high-inflation periods. Investors can buy physical Silver, in coins or in bars, or trade it through vehicles such as Exchange Traded Funds, which track its price on international markets.
Silver prices can move due to a wide range of factors. Geopolitical instability or fears of a deep recession can make Silver price escalate due to its safe-haven status, although to a lesser extent than Gold’s. As a yieldless asset, Silver tends to rise with lower interest rates. Its moves also depend on how the US Dollar (USD) behaves as the asset is priced in dollars (XAG/USD). A strong Dollar tends to keep the price of Silver at bay, whereas a weaker Dollar is likely to propel prices up. Other factors such as investment demand, mining supply – Silver is much more abundant than Gold – and recycling rates can also affect prices.
Silver is widely used in industry, particularly in sectors such as electronics or solar energy, as it has one of the highest electric conductivity of all metals – more than Copper and Gold. A surge in demand can increase prices, while a decline tends to lower them. Dynamics in the US, Chinese and Indian economies can also contribute to price swings: for the US and particularly China, their big industrial sectors use Silver in various processes; in India, consumers’ demand for the precious metal for jewellery also plays a key role in setting prices.
Silver prices tend to follow Gold’s moves. When Gold prices rise, Silver typically follows suit, as their status as safe-haven assets is similar. The Gold/Silver ratio, which shows the number of ounces of Silver needed to equal the value of one ounce of Gold, may help to determine the relative valuation between both metals. Some investors may consider a high ratio as an indicator that Silver is undervalued, or Gold is overvalued. On the contrary, a low ratio might suggest that Gold is undervalued relative to Silver.
Tuesday’s initial bear-flag breakdown has produced almost no follow-through yet, but today’s rejection at the flag’s top (10-day MA) keeps bears in control. A drop below today’s $3,964 low triggers a second breakdown signal; confirmation arrives beneath Tuesday’s $3,929 low, with the $3,886 swing low as the next domino.
The 50-day average ($3,867 and rising) converges with the 50% retracement at $3,846, forming the highest-probability bounce zone. Given the sluggish bearish momentum, the 50-day line may climb above the $3,886 swing low before price ever reaches it, tightening the support pocket further.
Should $3,846–$3,867 crack, the 61.8% Fibonacci at $3,720 enters play alongside the rising channel centerline—both logical destinations after mid-October’s false bullish breakout above the same channel.
Bulls reclaim near-term momentum only with a rally back above the 10-day average and today’s $4,020 high. That would open a retest of the 20-day line at $4,083 (last week’s bounce stalled at $4,046, well short of target).
With two trading days remaining, gold is on track to close as an inside week. Inside weeks following extreme moves routinely precede sharp directional breaks; next week’s resolution above or below this week’s $3,929–$4,020 range will dictate the next swing.
Continued chop is expected until the 50-day average and 50% retracement provide support near $3,846–$3,867. That confluence, combined with the false bullish channel breakout in mid-October and the rising channel centerline, marks a high-probability area for a bullish reversal. Failure there targets the 61.8% level at $3,720. On the weekly chart, an inside week setup positions gold for a potential breakout next week. Hold above the recent swing low at $3,886 maintains the broader uptrend; a decisive rally above the 10-day average and $4,020 high targets the 20-day line at $4,083.
For the next couple of months, I’m long only on natural gas. It’s just a matter of trying to get a decent price so that I can step in and start buying. I’ve got no interest in shorting it, like I said, and at least until we get to something like the March or April contract, I’m going to be looking for any dip as a trading signal.
I’d be particularly interested in the $3.60 level, but that is a pretty significant drop from here. Last month, when we opened up the November contract, we gapped higher, rallied pretty significantly, pulled back to fill the gap, and then gapped higher at the open again for the day here on the 20th. We never filled that but then gapped massively when we opened up the December contract.
So, I think we’re going to continue to see that type of behavior. Now all I need to do is see a price that’s worth chasing. I don’t like chasing after a move like we’ve seen here recently, and in fact, last week we had something like a 30% gain. That’s not what prudent traders do.
For a look at all of today’s economic events, check out our economic calendar.
Gold price today and prediction show that gold rose above $4,000 per ounce on Thursday. The rise followed a decline in the dollar and concerns over a prolonged U.S. government shutdown that increased worries about the economic outlook.
Spot gold increased 0.7% to $4,011.79 per ounce at 0914 GMT. U.S. gold futures for December delivery gained 0.7% to $4,021.20 per ounce. Analysts said that the weaker dollar and developments in the Supreme Court case on tariffs supported the movement in gold prices.
UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo said that Supreme Court skepticism over U.S. tariffs and a weaker dollar were factors driving gold prices. According to Staunovo, while gold prices may consolidate in the short term, further Federal Reserve rate cuts could push gold to $4,200 per ounce by the end of the year.
The U.S. dollar index fell 0.2% after reaching a four-month high in the previous session. A weaker dollar usually supports gold because it becomes cheaper for investors holding other currencies.
On Wednesday, U.S. Supreme Court justices raised doubts about the legality of President Donald Trump’s broad tariffs. The case carries global economic implications and could affect trade sentiment.
Gold price today and prediction are also influenced by recent U.S. labor market data. According to the ADP report released Wednesday, U.S. private employers added 42,000 jobs in October, surpassing the forecast of 28,000. The stronger labor market could reduce expectations for further rate cuts by the Federal Reserve. The U.S. government remains in a record-long shutdown due to a congressional impasse. This situation has forced investors and the Federal Reserve to rely on private-sector indicators for economic assessment.
The Fed reduced interest rates last week, but Chair Jerome Powell indicated it might be the last rate cut for 2025.
Market participants currently see a 63% chance of a rate cut in December, down from more than 90% last week. Gold, which does not yield interest, tends to perform well in low-interest-rate environments.
Analysts believe that continued uncertainty in U.S. politics, along with potential policy decisions, will influence the metal’s performance through the rest of the year.
European stocks also moved lower, led by losses in France’s Legrand after it missed sales growth expectations. The decline added pressure to markets already concerned about high valuations in technology-related companies.
Spot silver rose 1.4% to $48.74 per ounce. Platinum increased 0.4% to $1,567.01, while palladium gained 1.1% to $1,434.22. The movement in other metals reflected similar trends as investors sought safe-haven assets amid global uncertainty.
Analysts expect gold prices to remain supported in the coming months as investors watch for signs of additional rate cuts. If the dollar weakens further and economic risks persist, gold could approach the $4,200 level forecasted by UBS.
Investors are likely to monitor U.S. employment data, inflation figures, and any developments in the government shutdown to gauge the direction of gold prices in the short term.
1. What is the gold price today and prediction for the year-end?
Gold price today stands above $4,000 per ounce. Analysts expect it may reach $4,200 per ounce by year-end if the Federal Reserve continues rate cuts.
2. How does the dollar affect gold price today and prediction?
A weaker dollar makes gold cheaper for holders of other currencies. This usually supports higher demand and pushes the gold price up in the market.