- Gold price continues to draw support from dovish Fed-inspired USD selling bias.
- Worries about a US economic downturn further underpin the safe-haven metal.
- Traders turn cautious ahead of the release of the crucial US employment details.
Gold price (XAU/USD) extends its sideways consolidative price move below the weekly top touched the previous day as traders opt to wait on the sidelines ahead of the crucial US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report later during the North American session. In the meantime, rising bets for a larger interest rate cut by the Federal Reserve (Fed) in September exert downward pressure on the US Dollar (USD) for the third straight day and offer some support to the non-yielding yellow metal.
Meanwhile, a mixed bag of employment data released from the United States (US) this week suggested that the labor market was losing steam and fueled concerns about the health of the economy. This, along with persistent geopolitical tensions, tempers investors’ appetite for riskier assets and further acts as a tailwind for the safe-haven Gold price. That said, it will be prudent to wait for some follow-through buying before positioning for an extension of a two-day-old uptrend.
Daily Digest Market Movers: Gold price struggles to build on weekly gains as traders turn cautious ahead of US NFP
- The ADP National Employment Report published on Thursday showed that US private-sector employment rose 99,000 in August, marking the smallest gain since January 2021.
- The reading was well below the market expectation of 145,000 and was accompanied by a downward revision of the previous month’s print to 111,000 from 122,000 originally estimated.
- This comes on top of a report on Wednesday showing that job openings fell to 7.673 million, or a three-and-a-half-year low in July and provided further evidence of a deteriorating labor market.
- The Institute for Supply Management’s (ISM) Services PMI inched up from 51.4 to 51.5 in August, while the Prices Paid Index rose to 57.3 from 57 and the Employment Index declined to 50.2 from 51.1.
- Separately, the US Department of Labor (DoL) reported that Initial Jobless Claims declined more than anticipated, to 227K in the week ending August 31 from the previous weekly figure of 232K.
- San Francisco Fed President Mary Daly said that the US central bank must calibrate policy to the evolving economy and cut policy rates because inflation is falling and the economy is slowing.
- Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee said on Friday that the longer-run trend of the labor market and inflation data justify easing interest-rate policy soon and then steadily over the next year.
- According to the CME Group’s FedWatch Tool, the markets are pricing in a 40% chance that the Fed will lower borrowing costs by 50 basis points at the September 17-18 monetary policy meeting.
- Dovish expectations, meanwhile, keep the US Treasury bond yields depressed and the US Dollar bulls on the defensive, which, in turn, should act as a tailwind for the non-yielding gold price.
- The market focus now shifts to the crucial US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report, which is expected to show that the economy added 160K jobs in August and the Unemployment Rate ticked lower to 4.2%.
Technical Analysis: Gold price bulls await sustained move beyond the $2,524-2,525 supply zone before placing fresh bets
From a technical perspective, momentum beyond the $2,524-2,525 immediate hurdle will be seen as a fresh trigger for bullish traders. Moreover, oscillators on the daily chart are holding in positive territory and are still away from being in the overbought zone. This, in turn, suggests that the path of least resistance for the Gold price is to the upside. Some follow-through buying beyond the all-time peak, around the $2,531-2,532 area touched on August 20, will reaffirm the constructive outlook and pave the way for a further appreciating move.
On the flip side, the $2,500 psychological mark now seems to protect the immediate downside below which the Gold price could slide back to the $2,471-2,470 horizontal support. A convincing break below the latter will set the stage for deeper losses towards the 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA), currently pegged near the $2,440 region, en route to the $2,400 mark and the 100-day SMA, around the $2,388 zone.
Economic Indicator
Nonfarm Payrolls
The Nonfarm Payrolls release presents the number of new jobs created in the US during the previous month in all non-agricultural businesses; it is released by the US Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The monthly changes in payrolls can be extremely volatile. The number is also subject to strong reviews, which can also trigger volatility in the Forex board. Generally speaking, a high reading is seen as bullish for the US Dollar (USD), while a low reading is seen as bearish, although previous months’ reviews and the Unemployment Rate are as relevant as the headline figure. The market’s reaction, therefore, depends on how the market assesses all the data contained in the BLS report as a whole.