Gold (XAU/USD) extends a modest pullback on Thursday during the European session as US yields bounce back into the green and the US Dollar (USD) – to which Gold is negatively correlated – inches back into positive territory after falling to year-to-date lows early Wednesday.
Gold traders continue to assess the outlook for the US economy for guidance on the future path of interest rates, a key driver for the asset. Gold tends to appreciate as interest rates fall because this lowers the opportunity cost of holding the non-interest paying asset.
The release of the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) July meeting minutes on Wednesday revealed a greater willingness on the part of Fed members to cut interest rates. Some members even saw a 0.25% cut as plausible in July despite eventually voting against such a move. The majority saw a cut in interest rates as necessary in September if macroeconomic data continued its current trend. Overall, the Minutes solidified expectations of a September rate cut. However, given the market has already fully priced in the probability of at least a 0.25% cut, the Minutes had little impact on asset prices.
The chances of a “mega cut” of 0.50% at the September meeting have edged up again over recent sessions and at the time of publication stand at 34.5% compared to the 28.5% a few days ago, according to data from the CME FedWatch Tool. Whether this could materialize is of interest to traders since a 0.25% cut is now a fait accompli. Whether Gold presses higher again may greatly depend on whether the Fed in fact goes ahead with the larger 0.5% reduction in interest rates.
Given recent jitters about the state of the US labor market, the other key data out on Wednesday was the US Bureau of Labour Statistics (BLS) preliminary revisions to Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) data for the 12 months to March 2024. These showed an aggregate downward revision of 818,000, which translates into an average of 68,000 fewer payrolls per month, bringing the average pace down from 242,000 per month to 174,000 instead. Although substantially lower, the data isn’t bad enough to flash recession-warning signs, and besides, as Jim Reid, a strategist at Deutsche Bank notes, “the revisions only affect the numbers up to March, and don’t change our understanding of the more recent figures, which is ultimately what the Fed cares about.”
That said, the poor data still adds to the narrative of a weakening labor market, adding further pressure on US yields, the US Dollar, and is broadly supportive of Gold.
Global preliminary Purchasing Manager Index (PMI) data for August, which gauges activity levels in key industry sectors, is the main data point to watch on Thursday. The speech by Fed Chairman Jerome Powell at the central-banker moot in Jackson Hole will be the major event for Gold bugs on Friday.