Gold Price Struggles to Gain Momentum as Traders Await New Catalysts
The Gold price (XAU/USD) has rebounded from multi-day lows but remains under the $2,500 mark amid a renewed bid in the U.S. Dollar (USD) on Wednesday. Despite this, ongoing geopolitical risks and the potential for imminent Federal Reserve (Fed) rate cuts could support the yellow metal in the near term.
Later on Wednesday, the JOLTS Job Openings and the Fed Beige Book are scheduled for release. Investors are particularly focused on Friday’s U.S. August Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report, which could influence the size and pace of potential rate cuts at the Fed’s September policy meeting. A weaker-than-expected NFP reading might heighten concerns about a U.S. recession, potentially leading to faster Fed rate cuts and providing a boost to gold, as lower interest rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like gold.
Daily Digest Market Movers: Gold Price Pressured by Stronger U.S. Dollar
- China’s Caixin Services PMI fell to 51.6 in August, down from 52.1 in July and missing the market expectation of 52.2 by a significant margin.
- Daniel Ghali, a commodity strategist at TD Securities, noted, “Speculative positioning in gold seems maxed out for now. The pressure from the stronger dollar reflects our view on positioning.”
- The U.S. ISM Manufacturing PMI edged up to 47.2 in August from an eight-month low of 46.8 in July, but this was below the market consensus of 47.5.
- Traders have increased the likelihood of a more aggressive half-point rate cut to 39%, up from 31% before the release of the ISM Manufacturing PMI report, according to CME Group’s FedWatch tool.
- The U.S. JOLTS Job Openings are anticipated to decline slightly to 8.10 million, down from 8.184 million in June.
- The U.S. ISM Services PMI is expected to rise marginally to 51.4 in August from 51.1 in July.
Technical Analysis: Gold Price Maintains Positive Long-Term Outlook
Despite trading in negative territory for the day, gold maintains a bullish trend on the daily chart. The price remains above the key 100-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA), supported by a 14-day Relative Strength Index (RSI) that stays above the midline.
The critical resistance for gold lies between $2,530 and $2,540, corresponding to the upper boundary of a five-month-old ascending channel and the all-time high. A sustained move above this level could open the door to the psychological $2,600 mark.
Conversely, immediate support is found at $2,470, the low from August 22. A breach of this level could lead to a decline towards $2,432, the low from August 15, with further losses potentially driving the price down to $2,377, the 100-day EMA.