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Gold steadies near two-week high as Fed relief runs into a stubborn dollar

Gold steadies near two-week high as Fed relief runs into a stubborn dollar
Devesh Kumar
Jul 06, 2026, 01:19 AM

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Gold (XAU/USD or GLD)

Buy. Softer US hiring is cutting odds of a near-term Fed hike, lowering the opportunity cost for non-yielding gold. Gold is holding near a two-week high and just posted its first weekly advance in five weeks, but the dollar hasn’t rolled over—so upside is steadier than a blow-off rally, which fits a controlled long.

Key Risk: US data re-accelerates and markets re-price an earlier Fed hike, pushing real yields up and capping gold fast.

Silver (XAG/USD or SLV)

Buy. Silver is lagging gold after recent gains and is still reacting to the same rate/dollar backdrop. If gold’s repricing continues, silver typically catches up because it’s more sensitive to shifts in macro expectations and risk appetite.

Key Risk: Industrial demand fears worsen or the dollar strengthens again, leaving silver unable to follow gold higher.

  • Gold holds near two-week high as Fed hike bets ease after weak payrolls.
  • Dollar caps bullion as traders await Fed minutes for policy clues today.
  • JPMorgan sees gold gains capped by soft demand and real-yield risks.

Gold is holding its ground again, but this is not the same rally that carried bullion through the early part of the year. The latest move is being driven less by panic and more by repricing.

A softer US labour-market reading has reduced fears that the Federal Reserve will rush into another rate increase, giving non-yielding assets some breathing space.

Yet the dollar has not rolled over, and that is keeping gold’s rebound measured rather than explosive.

Rate relief steadies bullion

Spot gold was little changed near $4,174.66 an ounce in Asian trade on Monday, after earlier touching its highest level since June 22.

US gold futures for August delivery rose 1.5% to $4,186.70.

The metal is coming off a weekly gain of more than 2%, its first advance in five weeks.

The turn followed signs that hiring in the US economy is slowing, which encouraged traders to scale back expectations for a near-term Fed hike.

That matters because gold pays no interest. When markets price in higher rates, the opportunity cost of holding bullion rises.

When those expectations soften, gold usually gets a cushion.

Dollar strength limits the upside

The rally still has a ceiling. The dollar gained about 0.1%, making gold more expensive for buyers using other currencies.

Market strategists see that as the main reason bullion has not been able to extend last week’s rebound more forcefully.

Rate markets now imply about a 55% chance of a September Fed increase, down from above 60% before the latest labour-market figures.

That shift is supportive for gold, but it is not a full rejection of the Fed tightening story.

Investors will now turn to the minutes of the Fed’s June 16-17 meeting, due Wednesday.

The release should show how strongly policymakers debated the need for further tightening before the recent pullback in oil prices and softer jobs data changed the market mood.

Demand outlook keeps forecasts cautious

JPMorgan has also cooled some of the more aggressive expectations around bullion.

The bank expects gold to average about $4,300 an ounce in the third quarter and $4,500 in the fourth, citing weaker-than-expected demand from key buying sectors and renewed sensitivity to real yields.

That still points to upside from current levels, but it is not a runaway forecast.

The bank also sees downside risks if incoming US data revives the case for earlier Fed action.

Other precious metals were softer after recent gains. Silver slipped 0.6% to $62.03 an ounce after earlier touching its highest level since June 23.

Platinum lost 0.1% to $1,636.60, while palladium eased 0.2% to $1,271.75.