- Gold price hovers below $2,300 as uncertainty ahead of the Fed’s policy announcements improves the appeal of the US Dollar and bond yields.
- The Fed is expected to support keeping interest rates at their current levels for a longer period.
- The strong US Q1 Employment Cost Index adds to evidence of the stubborn inflation outlook.
Gold price (XAU/USD) trades close to a more than three-week low around $2,285 in Wednesday’s early New York session. The precious metal weakens as the US Dollar and bond yields strengthen amid firm speculation that the Federal Reserve (Fed) will opt for maintaining a restrictive interest rate environment for a longer period due to inflation remaining persistently higher than expected in the first quarter of the year.
In this context, 10-year US Treasury yields move higher to 4.69%. The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the US Dollar’s value against six major currencies and is negatively correlated to the Gold price, jumps to a two-week high of around 106.50. The US Dollar remained on the backfoot last week after weak growth in Q1 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) raised concerns over the country’s economic outlook. However, it bounced back strongly on Tuesday after the US Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA) reported strong Q1 Employment Cost Index numbers.
Meanwhile, the appeal for the US Dollar has further improved as the ADP Employment Change for April has surprisingly turned out upbeat. The ADP agency showed that US private employers hired 192K job-seekers, higher than the prior reading of 184K. Investors forecasted a slight decline to 175K.
Daily digest market movers: Gold price sees more downside on surprisingly upbeat US Employment Change
- Gold price falls sharply, below the crucial support of $2,285, on expectations that the Federal Reserve will maintain a hawkish guidance on interest rates in its monetary policy meeting after keeping interest rates steady in the range of 5.25%-5.50% for the sixth straight time.
- A slew of hotter-than-expected inflation readings so far this year indicate that the disinflation process has stalled. It suggests that the Fed should keep interest rates high for a longer period until policymakers gain confidence that price pressures will sustainably return to the desired rate of 2%. Also, the strong US Q1 Employment Cost Index is another indication that price pressures remained hot in the January-March period. The index is generally driven by a strong wage growth environment in which labor demand remains strong, which rose by 1.2% in the first quarter, against the consensus of 1.0% and the prior reading of 0.9%.
- Prospects of interest rates remaining higher bode poorly for Gold as it increases the opportunity cost of holding an investment in it. Meanwhile, investors are keen to know about rate-cut timing and the current status of the Fed’s three rate-cut projections, indicated by March’s dot plot. The CME FedWatch tool shows that traders see the Fed begin reducing interest rates from the September meeting.
- In Wednesday’s session, investors will also focus on the ISM Manufacturing PMI data for April will be published in the early New York session before the Fed’s interest rate decision. The Manufacturing PMI is estimated to have dropped to 50.0 from 50.3 in March.
- From the Manufacturing PMI report, investors will keenly focus on the New Orders subcomponent. The preliminary PMI survey by S&P Global for April reported that output growth cooled in line with demand weakness as new orders decreased for the first time in six months, albeit dropping only modestly. Falling new business was signalled among manufacturers and service providers alike. Upbeat employment and factory data would improve the US economic outlook, while weak numbers will deepen concerns over a slowdown.
Technical Analysis: Gold price slips below $2,300
Gold reported steep losses after a breakdown of the Bearish Flag formation in the four-hour time frame. The Bearish Flag formation demonstrates a consolidation move after a sharp correction, generally following the ongoing trend. The near-term outlook is bearish as the Gold price is trading below the 20-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA), which is at $2,312.
On the downside, March 23 high at $2,223 will be the major support for the Gold price. The 14-period Relative Strength Index (RSI) oscillates in the bearish range of 20.00-40.00, suggesting that momentum has leaned towards bears.
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