Skip to content Skip to footer

Gold price eyes $3,400 as Fed cut bets grow, Trump eyes new Fed pick

Gold price advances during the North American session as speculation grows that the Federal Reserve (Fed) could begin to cut rates at the next meeting. At the same time, investors await US President Donald Trump’s appointment of a new Fed Governor. The XAU/USD trades at $3,381, up 0.20%.

Since last Friday, Bullion prices have recovered after July’s Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report revealed a significant downward revision to May and June figures. Investors, caught off guard, began to price in the first 25-basis-point rate cut at the September meeting.

On Tuesday, the Institute for Supply Management (ISM) revealed the Services Purchasing Managers Index (PMI), which showed a deceleration in business activity, contrary to economists’ expectations. Other data from the Commerce Department indicated that the trade deficit narrowed in June.

Gold price eyes $3,400
Gold price eyes $3,400

The resignation of Fed Governor Adriana Kugler opened the door for Trump to nominate someone to succeed Jerome Powell as the next Fed Chair. The US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent was one of the nominees, but he told Trump that he is not interested.

Trade news revealed that effective tariffs on August 7 would be between 10% and 41%. The Budget Lab at Yale estimates the average of overall US duties rose to 18.3%, its highest level since 1934.

Given the fundamental backdrop, Gold seems poised to challenge the $3,400 mark. However, the recovery of US Treasury yields and the Greenback could cap Bullion’s advance after reaching an eight-day high of $3,390.

This week, the US economic docket will feature Jobless Claims, Consumer Sentiment data and Fed speakers.

Daily digest market movers: Gold climbs as Services PMI slows, increasing odds of Fed easing
US economic data showed a slowdown in services sector activity, with the ISM Services PMI falling to 50.1 in July from 50.8 in June, missing expectations for an increase to 51.5. Earlier data also revealed that the US trade deficit narrowed to its lowest level in nearly two years, signaling improving trade dynamics despite softer domestic demand.
The US Goods and Services Trade Balance in June printed a deficit of $-60.2 billion, below May’s $-71.7 billion and forecasts of $-61.6 billion. The trade gap with China shrank to its lowest level in almost 21 years, according to the Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA).
Investors bought Gold as sentiment shifted sour, questioning the credibility of the upcoming US economic data releases after the removal of the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS).
Citi updated its Gold forecast for the next three months from $3,300 to $3,500 per troy ounce on Monday. They mentioned in the note that “US growth and tariff-related inflation concerns are set to remain elevated during 2H’25, which, alongside a weaker US Dollar, are set to drive Gold moderately higher to new all-time highs.”
XAU/USD technical outlook: Gold rallies with buyers targeting $3,400
Gold price trades at nine-day highs shy of the $3,400 figure after clearing the confluence of the 50-day and 20-day Simple Moving Averages (SMAs) near $3,343 and the $3,350 figure. Despite this, the uptrend is questionable, but it should resume once buyers drive XAU/USD above the July 23 high of $3,438, putting in place a test of the June 16 high of $3,452.

Conversely, XAU/USD tumbling below $3,350 exposes $3,300, ahead of the 100-day SMA at $3,267.

Source: Fxstreet