Gold (XAU/USD) continues to bounce down a roughly week-long range between about $2,630 and $2,670 on Monday after the release of negative-for-Gold US employment data gets neutralized by persistent safe-haven demand.
According to data released on Friday, US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) beat economists’ expectations by a wide margin, rising by 254K in September when forecasts had only been for a 140K increase. The US Unemployment Rate, meanwhile, fell to 4.1% from 4.2% when markets had feared the opposite, according to data from the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS). The release revealed the US economy was in good shape, averting fears of a “hard landing”.
The reason the NFP report is important is because, since August, the labor market has taken over from inflation as the chief concern of the US Federal Reserve (Fed). It was then that Fed Chairman Jerome Powell stated in a pivotal speech that, "We do not seek or welcome further cooling in labor market conditions."
The better-than-expected NFP data significantly reduced the chances of the Fed making another double-dose 50 basis points (bps) (0.50%) rate cut at its November meeting. The probability of such an outcome has fallen to zero on Monday from around 35% prior to the release, with markets now even pricing in over a 10% chance of the Fed not cutting interest rates at all, according to the CME Fedwatch tool.
Consequently, the NFP release pushed the Gold price down to its low of the day at around $2,632 on Friday. This is because the expectation of interest rates remaining elevated reduces the attractiveness of Gold as a non-interest-paying asset and strengthens the US Dollar (USD), adding a further headwind to the yellow metal, which is mainly priced and traded in the currency.
Gold price benefits from continued demand as a safe-haven asset as the conflict in the Middle East worsens and intensifies. According to the latest reports, Israeli forces have blown up a mosque in the southern Lebanese village of Yaroun, says Aljazeera News.
Markets are also on tenterhooks as Israel is widely expected to launch an imminent retaliatory attack on Iran after its rocket attack last week. Iran launched around 200 missiles, many of them ballistic, to avenge the death of Hassan Nasrallah, the head of the Iran-backed group Hezbollah.
The yellow metal is further supported by hopes of a revival in demand from China following the government’s decision to stimulate the economy with a huge package of measures. China constitutes Gold’s largest market, so the health of the Chinese economy can be a key factor that impacts its price.
Further, the overall trend lower in global interest rates – notwithstanding the recalibration of their trajectory in the US – enables Gold to retain its attractiveness as a portfolio asset.