Gold () remains the most resilient asset in global markets as traders recalibrate ahead of the Federal Reserve’s December 10 decision. Spot prices trade around $4,218 per ounce, holding firmly above the six-week high reached Monday when bullion touched $4,236.10 before easing slightly. Futures on COMEX hover near $4,250, down about 0.6%, reflecting light profit-taking rather than a shift in sentiment. The broader narrative remains bullish as investors assign an 88% probability to a 25-basis-point Fed rate cut, while Treasury yields edge higher but fail to dent long-term demand for non-yielding assets like gold.
The short-term pullback to the $4,180–$4,200 range coincides with a mild rebound in U.S. Treasury yields. Ten-year yields stand near a two-week high, limiting immediate upside momentum. Yet, the macro environment clearly favors the metal. CME’s FedWatch shows the market almost fully pricing in a December cut to a 3.50–3.75% range. Lower borrowing costs typically expand liquidity and reduce the opportunity cost of holding bullion. The U.S. Dollar Index (DXY), now at 99.55, has rebounded modestly from a monthly low of 99.00, but remains 4% weaker than November’s peak, keeping gold competitive for buyers abroad.
Fundamentally, institutional appetite remains powerful. The increased holdings to 1,050 metric tons, its highest since mid-2022. Global ETF gold holdings reached a three-year high as COMEX inventories dropped roughly 20% from their peak, signaling persistent physical scarcity. Central banks have added aggressively—led by China, Turkey, and Poland—driving long-term structural demand. Analysts cite these forces as the backbone of gold’s 60% year-over-year rally, which pushed the 52-week range between $2,583 and $4,382 per ounce. This compression between record demand and falling exchange stocks suggests the next major move could retest $4,381–$4,400, assuming the Fed confirms a dovish stance.
In India, the world’s second-largest consumer, retail gold maintains near-record territory. 24K gold trades between ₹1,30,490 and ₹1,31,680 per 10g, while 22K stands around ₹1,19,610–₹1,20,710. Prices in Chennai lead the pack at ₹1,31,680, followed by Delhi at ₹1,30,640. Despite today’s ₹880 decline (-0.67%), domestic values remain 15% higher than in Dubai due to import duties and a weaker rupee. Silver gained ₹100/kg, underscoring continued jewelry and investment demand fueled by the wedding season and Diwali momentum.
In London, gold trades around £3,200 per ounce (roughly £102.89 per gram), down just 0.5% on the day, aligning with mild global corrections. Dubai’s 24K price holds at ₹112,816 per 10g, still below India’s equivalent by nearly ₹16,850 (about 14.9% cheaper), reflecting lighter taxation and stronger dirham liquidity. This differential continues to drive cross-border bullion flows, a factor monitored closely by refiners and ETF custodians.
Gold’s momentum remains anchored above its 20-day EMA of $4,122.78, maintaining a strong upward slope. The 14-day RSI near 59 shows positive but cooling momentum, confirming consolidation rather than reversal. The ascending trendline from $3,933.90 provides critical support near $4,093, aligning with the 20-EMA. Technical models from LiteFinance and FXEmpire converge on a bullish scenario: dips toward $4,195–$4,165 are likely to attract buyers. Intraday strategies favor accumulation above $4,202, with upside targets at $4,314–$4,381. A daily close beyond $4,255 could unlock the next leg higher toward $4,441, while a sustained drop below $4,114 would signal a temporary loss of momentum.
The run-up to the has traders divided. On TradingView, professional desks debate between “sell the premium” strategies near $4,240 and “buy the dip” setups around $4,185. Smart-money analyses identify a liquidity zone between $4,265–$4,267, warning of potential false breakouts before trend resumption. This tension reflects speculative positioning ahead of the jobs report, , and the delayed release—all crucial in shaping the Fed’s tone next week.
Silver’s performance strengthens the broader precious-metals rally. The metal reached $57.47 per ounce, just below Monday’s record of $58.10, posting over 12% weekly gains. Shrinking inventories at the Shanghai Futures Exchange, now down 61% year-to-date to 559 tonnes, and COMEX reserves at an eight-month low of 457 million ounces, confirm global tightness. ETF inflows surged 9.5 million ounces last week, the highest daily inflow since 2021. The gold-to-silver ratio has fallen below long-term support, signaling relative outperformance for silver but validating broad capital rotation into metals as a hedge against fiscal debasement.
U.S. manufacturing PMI fell to 48.2, missing expectations and reinforcing contractionary conditions. Sub-indices for employment and new orders weakened further, underscoring a cooling economy. In China, PMI readings remain below 50, extending concerns about slowing industrial output. Meanwhile, persistent geopolitical tensions in Ukraine, the Middle East, and Venezuela maintain safe-haven inflows. The U.S. 10-year yield near 4.1%, while relatively high, is offset by collapsing real yields as inflation expectations stay muted. These crosscurrents underpin gold’s defensive strength, with traders now seeing it as the anchor of 2026 asset allocation.
Near-term technical consensus identifies $4,202–$4,190 as immediate support, followed by $4,160 and $4,114. As long as prices hold this cluster, bulls maintain control. Resistance stands at $4,255–$4,265, with the critical breakout point at $4,300. Above that, momentum traders will aim for the $4,381–$4,400 record zone, marking the next psychological test. Should a deeper correction emerge, the $4,000–$3,900 band remains the medium-term floor.
Institutional and central bank data show steady inflows. Reports indicate net official purchases of over 80 tonnes in November, led by the People’s Bank of China and the Reserve Bank of India. Sovereign accumulation remains a structural driver, with gold now comprising over 21% of total FX reserves among emerging economies. The corporate side mirrors this positioning—miners like have benefited from record profitability, prompting UBS to lift its target to $125 per share, highlighting the equity linkage between bullion and mining valuations.
Currency divergence adds nuance to pricing. The yen’s continued weakness amplifies gold’s Japanese value, with local XAU/JPY trading near record highs. In Europe, the euro’s resilience tempers gains in local terms, keeping near €3,860. In the U.K., soft retail data and a still-restrictive Bank of England stance maintain demand from wealth managers seeking inflation protection. Globally, the synchronised expectation of rate normalization into 2026 sustains the thesis for sustained gold allocation in both institutional and retail portfolios.
Institutional flows mirror what’s visible in other hard-asset plays. Hedge funds tracked by CFTC data increased net long positions for a fifth consecutive week, now holding 210,000 contracts. Corporate insiders in gold mining firms have quietly accumulated shares, anticipating elevated pricing through 2026. While the S&P 500 has entered blackout periods for Q4, select executives across major mining groups continue to increase equity exposure, consistent with expectations of $4,500–$5,000 gold in the next cycle.
trades near $1,660, and palladium at $1,420, both steady after prolonged weakness, while copper stabilizes at $5.26, signaling industrial resilience. The precious-industrial spread now mirrors early-2011 patterns—a period historically preceding multi-year bull cycles in metals. The correlation between gold and real M2 liquidity remains above 0.85, suggesting continued sensitivity to central-bank balance sheets.
With spot gold consolidating at $4,218, futures above $4,250, ETF inflows at multi-year highs, and real yields softening, the structural bias is bullish. Support between $4,160–$4,200 defines the tactical floor, while breakout potential above $4,255 opens a path toward $4,381–$4,441. Any pullback toward $4,100–$4,000 should be viewed as an accumulation opportunity rather than a trend reversal. The underlying drivers—monetary easing expectations, fiscal imbalances, and sustained central-bank demand—make XAU/USD a BUY, targeting $4,450–$4,500 over the next quarter if the Fed confirms a dovish pivot.
That’s TradingNEWS.com

