Gold prices posted solid gains on Monday as the US Dollar weakened during the North American session despite positive news regarding US-China trade talks. A retracement of US Treasury bond yields underpins the golden metal, which trades at $3,329 a troy ounce at the time of writing.
An improvement in risk appetite was not an excuse for Bullion buyers to extend the XAU/USD uptrend despite the reduced demand for safe haven assets. A Wall Street Journal article mentioned that US President Donald Trump granted some flexibility on export controls to US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent as talks between the US and China got underway on Monday.
Easing tensions between Washington and Beijing could undermine the appeal of Gold. However, if US Treasury bond yields continue to drop, this would put a lid on Bullion’s fall.
The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the US Dollar’s performance against a basket of six currencies, falls by 0.25% to 98.95, making the US Dollar-denominated asset more expensive for foreign buyers.
Geopolitical tensions remain high as Russia claimed control of territory in Ukraine’s east-central region. An escalation of the conflict could push Gold prices higher, clearing the path to test $3,350 in the short term.
Ahead this week, traders are eyeing the release of the latest US Consumer Price Index (CPI) report, followed by the Producer Price Index (PPI), jobs data, and the University of Michigan (UoM) Consumer Sentiment survey.
Daily digest market movers: Gold climbs as US yields tumble, undermining the US Dollar
The US 10-year Treasury yield falls three basis points to 4.478%. US real yields have followed suit and are also down for the same amount at 2.168%, a headwind for Bullion prices.
Gold prices are recovering following an upbeat May US Nonfarm Payrolls report. The print exceeded forecasts of 130K, rising by 139K, while the Unemployment Rate remained steady at 4.2%. The data reinforced the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) approach of wait-and-see, fueling a reduction of rate cut bets pricing, with traders eyeing less than two rate cuts this year.
On Wednesday, the US CPI is expected to rise from 2.3% to 2.5% YoY, with core figures projected to increase from 2.8% to 2.9% YoY. If the numbers come as expected, the Fed would not have room to reduce interest rates as demanded by President Trump.
Data over the weekend showed that China’s central bank added Gold to its reserves in May for the seventh straight month.
The de-escalation of US-Sino trade war tensions could exert downward pressure on Gold, which so far has gained over 26% this year.
Money markets suggest that traders are pricing in 44.5 basis points of easing toward the end of the year, according to Prime Market Terminal data.

XAU/USD technical outlook: Gold price advances toward $3,350
Gold prices dipped to a support trendline below $3,300 before bouncing off those levels toward the daily high near $3,340, which has opened the door to challenge the $3,350 level. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) remains bullish; therefore, if XAU/USD clears $3,400, the yellow metal would be poised to challenge key resistance levels.
Next lies the $3,450 mark, followed by the all-time high of $3,500. Conversely, if Gold tumbles beneath $3,300, sellers could drive the non-yielding metal lower to test the 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at $3,260, followed by the April 3 high, which has since turned into support at $3,167.
Source: Fxstreet