Latest News

Gold reaches a new high after a week-long peak amid hopes for lowered Fed rates

On Wednesday, gold prices were near a one-week-high after investors expected that the U.S. Federal Reserve would lower interest rates in January.

At 9:25 am, spot gold was up by 0.3% to $4,144.06 an ounce. ET (1425 GMT), having reached its highest level since November 14, earlier in the day. U.S. Gold Futures for December Delivery were unchanged at $4,140.30 an ounce.

Edward Meir of Marex, a Marex analyst, noted that gold was rising despite the dollar index increasing by 0.2%.

Rate-cut bets are "helping gold a little, as is the discussion that they might nominate a Fed Chairman soon and the front runner Kevin Hassett of the Economic Advisory Committee of the President."

Hassett has stated, along with U.S. president Donald Trump, that interest rates should lower than what they are now under Fed chair Jerome Powell. This news has given a boost to gold, a non yielding asset that thrives in an environment of low interest rates.

The CME FedWatch tool revealed that traders see 83% of the chance of a Fed cut in rates next month, as opposed to 30% one week earlier.

The number of Americans who filed new claims for unemployment benefits dropped last week. This indicates that layoffs are still low, but the labor market struggles to create enough jobs to accommodate those without a job amid the lingering uncertainty of the economy.

The U.S. consumer's confidence fell in November, as consumers became more worried about their jobs and financial prospects. These data were released in response to a recent series of dovish remarks from Fed policymakers.

Most research banks expect gold to exceed $4,000 an ounce by 2026. Deutsche Bank raised its gold forecast for 2026 to $4,450 per ounce, up from $4,000 citing stable investor flows and persistent demand by central banks.

Silver spot rose 1.5%, to $52.19 an ounce. Platinum was up 0.6%, at $1,562.96, and palladium gained 0.7%, to $1,407.50. (Reporting and editing by Anjana Anil in Bengaluru, Noel John at the New York Times)

(source: Reuters)