- The Gold price is currently facing challenges in gaining a clear direction due to a variety of factors pulling it in different ways.
- Fed officials are pushing back against expectations for early rate cuts in 2024, which is limiting the potential for Gold price to rise.
- Geopolitical risks are supporting the metal’s price, especially ahead of the US PCE Price Index release on Friday.
The Gold price (XAU/USD) is struggling to make significant gains and is stuck in a sideways pattern during the first half of the European session on Tuesday. Several influential Federal Reserve (Fed) officials have recently downplayed market expectations about a quick change in the US central bank’s policy stance and are trying to lower the likelihood of early rate cuts in 2024. This, combined with heavy selling of the Japanese Yen (JPY) after the Bank of Japan (BoJ) meeting, is boosting demand for the US Dollar (USD) and creating challenges for the non-yielding yellow metal.
Furthermore, the overall positive sentiment in global equity markets, with US stock indices closing near record highs on Monday, is also limiting the potential for Gold price to rise. However, investors are still wary of geopolitical risks related to the conflict in the Middle East and concerns about a potential global economic downturn, particularly in China and the Eurozone. These factors continue to provide some support to the safe-haven XAU/USD. Traders are also hesitant to take significant positions ahead of an important US inflation report scheduled for Friday.
Market participants will closely monitor the US Core Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) Price Index for indications of the Fed’s future policy decisions, which will impact USD demand and provide direction for Gold price. In the meantime, the housing market data including Building Permits and Housing Starts, as well as a speech by Richmond Fed President Thomas Barkin, will influence XAU/USD trading during the North American session on Tuesday.
Daily Digest Market Movers: Gold price continues with its struggle to gain any meaningful traction
- Chicago Federal Reserve President Austan Goolsbee, along with Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester, pushed back against market bets on interest rate cuts on Monday.
- Goolsbee said that he was confused over the market reaction to last week’s FOMC meeting and that the central bank is not precommiting to cutting rates soon and swiftly.
- Separately, Cleveland Fed President Loretta Mester noted that financial markets had gotten a little bit ahead of the central bank on when to expect interest rate cuts next year.
- This comes on the back of New York Fed President John Williams’s remarks on Friday that it was premature to speculate about rate cuts and caps the upside for the Gold price.
- The markets, however, seem convinced that the Fed will pivot to easing by the first half of 2024, which continues to undermine the US Dollar and lends support to the metal.
