Gold sees odds for a new all-time high this week evaporate with upbeat NFP.

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  • Gold sees earlier gains being pared back a touch. 
  • Nonfarm Payrolls came in below consensus, while unemployment dropping.
  • Gold sees odds for a new all-time high this Friday fade. 

Gold’s price (XAU/USD) will not print a fresh all-time high this Friday ahead of the weekend. The Nonfarm Payrolls number came in at 143,000, which was below the expected 170,000 number. Markets were too eager though this week to add to their conviction that the number would be much lower, with the lowest estimate around 105,000, which results in a knee jerk reaction and Gold giving back its gains for this Friday.

Meanwhile, headlines emerged on Friday that China’s central bank, the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), has expanded its Gold reserves for a third month in a row. Even at fresh all-time high prices, the central bank bought roughly 0.16 million troy ounces in January, Bloomberg reports. Meanwhile, threats from US President Donald Trump to slap more tariffs on the Eurozone and other countries are keeping Gold supported as a safe haven for investors should the tariff war escalate further. 

Daily digest market movers: That is all folks

  • Gold reserves held by the People’s Bank of China rose by 0.16 million troy ounces last month, according to data released Friday. The central bank resumed adding Gold reserves in November after a six-month halt that ended an 18-month buying spree, Bloomberg reports. 
  • The US-China trade war, fears that President Donald Trump will follow through on threats to impose tariffs on other nations, and his unconventional geopolitical possible interventions are supporting Gold’s role as a safe haven in uncertain times. The bull run looks set to continue, with prices likely to hit $3,000 an ounce within three months, Citigroup Inc. said in a note, Bloomberg reports. 
  • Zimbabwe’s Gold output rose to 3,134.34 kg in January, up from 2,375.32 kg a year earlier, Fidelity Gold Refinery said on Friday in an emailed statement, Reuters reported. It was mostly the smaller-scale miners who were good for the increase in output, while the larger mines declined in production. 
  • The US Nonfarm Payrolls employment report for January came in at 143,000, below the 170,000 consensus view for new workers in the month compared to 256,000 in December. However, broad expectations were for a much softer number, according to several bank analysts and forecasters. This dampened odds for a possible third rate cut in totality from the Federal Reserve for 2025, putting some selling pressure on Gold in the aftermath. 

Technical Analysis: Sell the fact

With the Nonfarm Payrolls release on Friday, it is clear that if Gold hits a new all-time high, it will be due to a very weak number in employment data. However, as usual, caution needs to be taken with this build-up in expectations. Even a number in line with consensus could be enough to disappoint markets on their downside expectations, triggering  a knee-jerk reaction with Gold facing some profit-taking ahead of the end of the week. 

The Pivot Point level on Friday is the first nearby support at $2,854, followed by the S1 support at $2,835. From there, S2 support should come in at $2,815. In case of a correction, the bigger $2,790 level (the previous high of October 31, 2024) should be able to catch any falling knives.

On the upside, the R1 resistance comes in at $2,874, just slightly below the current all-time high at $2,882. In case the rally can pick up where it left off, the upside level to beat in terms of daily pivotal levels is the R2 resistance near $2,893 ahead of  $2,900 as a big figure.

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