Gold prices rose by 1.0% this week to $2,664
per troy ounce, showing resilience despite rising U.S. Treasury yields, which
typically weigh on the metal. The 10-year Treasury yield climbed to its highest
level since April 2024, but gold continues to gain momentum, supported by a
combination of fundamental and technical factors.
One key driver is the resumption of gold
purchases by the People’s Bank of China (PBOC) after a six-month pause. The
PBOC added 0.45% to its reserves, bringing them to 73.29 million troy ounces.
Historically, such activity has had a bullish impact on gold prices. Eight
months ago, similar purchases were followed by a 20% rally. If the PBOC
continues buying gold, especially amid potential geopolitical tensions with the
U.S., prices could climb 10-15% higher, reaching $3,000-$3,200 per ounce.
However, this upside scenario hinges on prices holding above the diamond
pattern support at $2,536 per ounce. A breach of this level would invalidate
the bullish outlook.
Institutional investors are also backing
gold’s rise. The SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) saw $1.12 billion in net inflows two
weeks ago, marking the largest since March 2024. At that time, gold prices
surged by 19.5%, underscoring the potential for a similar rally if inflows
persist. Furthermore, the Federal Reserve’s ongoing monetary easing provides
additional support. Although the pace of rate cuts may slow, Fed Governor
Christopher Waller reaffirmed the continuation of the easing cycle, which
traditionally boosts gold by lowering the opportunity cost of holding
non-yielding assets.
The U.S. macroeconomic landscape presents a
mixed picture. Initial jobless claims declined, while PMIs for manufacturing
and services exceeded expectations. However, signs of labor market cooling
emerged, with ADP Nonfarm Payrolls adding 122,000 jobs, missing the 139,000
consensus, and JOLTS Job Openings reaching a six-month high of 8.1 million.
This cooling could delay further Fed rate cuts, potentially capping gold’s
upside in the short term.
From a technical perspective, gold faces
immediate resistance at $2,670-$2,690 per ounce. A break above this level could
propel prices toward the $3,000-$3,200 range. Conversely, a drop below $2,536
would signal a bearish shift. This Friday’s U.S. December Nonfarm Payrolls report
is likely to be a critical catalyst, potentially determining whether gold
continues its upward trajectory or faces a correction.
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