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Gold prices steady as traders look at delayed US job data to gauge Fed rate path

The gold price remained stable on Thursday as investors digested the delayed U.S. employment report, which showed better than expected September employment figures. They were looking for more clues about the Federal Reserve policy outlook. As of 9:25 am, spot gold was up by 0.1%, at $4,083.95 an ounce. ET (1425 GMT). U.S. gold for delivery in December rose by 0.1%, to $4.083.30 an ounce. Labor Department data, which was delayed by the government shutdown, revealed that nonfarm payrolls rose 119,000 in September, more than twice the expected 50,000 increase.

Peter Grant, senior metals analyst at Zaner Metals, said that despite the better than expected jobs print, there is still some doubt about the validity of the data.

Grant said that gold is stable because "the market had already priced in the probability of a December rate reduction not happening."

The traders now expect a rate reduction next month to be as high as 36%.

In low-interest rate environments, gold, which is a non-yielding investment, does well. The Bureau of Labor Statistics cancelled the October report due to the shutdown and combined it with the November figures. The combined report is due to be released after the next Federal Reserve meeting on December 16. Minutes from the Fed meeting in October revealed that policymakers cut interest rates, despite warnings that this could increase the risk of inflation or undermine public trust in the central banks.

U.S. index futures continued to rise on Thursday following the report.

Gold, the traditional safe-haven, is up 55% in this year. It reached a record high on October 20, reaching $4,381.22. UBS increased its mid-year 2026 gold target price to $4,500 an ounce despite recent consolidation. This was due to expectations of Federal Reserve rate reductions, persistent geopolitical risk, and strong demand from central banks and ETFs.

Other than that, silver spot fell by 0.7%, to $51.02 an ounce. Platinum fell by 0.2%, to $1,543.15, and palladium rose 2.2%, to $1,410.16. (Reporting and editing by Alexander Smith in Bengaluru, with assistance from Pablo Sinha)

(source: Reuters)