A surprisingly soft reading on the US labor market handed gold bulls a reprieve on Wednesday, lifting the precious metal back above the psychologically significant $4,000 threshold. Spot gold jumped 1.74% on the day to settle at $4,091.60 an ounce, briefly touching intraday highs above $4,097 as a weaker dollar and falling bond yields provided the catalyst for a sharp relief rally.
The bounce came after the ADP National Employment Report showed the US private sector added just 98,000 jobs in June, undershooting economist forecasts that had clustered between 105,000 and 113,000. The miss followed a downwardly revised 122,000 in May. ADP chief economist Nela Richardson noted that while the financial and technology sectors continue to hire, the hospitality industry has now weakened for six consecutive months. The disappointing data immediately dragged down Treasury yields and pressured the greenback, offering a tailwind for the non-yielding metal.
The manufacturing sector added to the downbeat mood. The ISM Purchasing Managers’ Index slipped to 53.3 in June, shy of the 54.0 consensus, while the prices-paid component within the report plunged from 82.1 to 73.0 — a drop that signals easing input price pressures and further reduces the urgency for aggressive Federal Reserve action.
A Technical Storm Brewing Beneath the Surface
Yet the daily pop does little to dispel the broader technical damage that has accumulated during gold’s punishing second quarter. The metal lost 16% over the three-month period, its steepest quarterly decline since 2013, and now sits roughly 27% below its all-time record of $5,626.80 set back in late January. The 50-day moving average is bearing down on the 200-day moving average from above, an alignment that, if confirmed, would produce the so-called death cross — a formation long dreaded by chartists for its historically bearish connotations.
That signal is not infallible. In 2017 a death cross passed with little fanfare, and in 2023 the pattern reversed into a golden cross within weeks, sparking a near-200% rally to the eventual record high. Nonetheless, with the relative strength index at a middling 39.4 and the spot price nearly 8% below its 50-day average, the near-term bias remains tilted to the downside.
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Central Banks Step In as Retail Exits
One structural pillar continues to provide a floor under gold’s slide. Central banks added a net 244 tonnes of bullion in the first quarter of 2026, following a full-year haul of 863 tonnes in 2025. This steady institutional accumulation has historically absorbed selling pressure during corrections and could act as a buffer against a deeper rout. The World Gold Council’s base case projects an average price of roughly $4,100 for the second half of the year, with a 5% band of fluctuating above or below that level.
The Fed’s New Silence Adds to the Fog
Compounding the uncertainty, Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh used the ECB’s Sintra forum to unveil a sharp departure from the central bank’s traditional communication playbook. The Fed will no longer offer forward guidance, instead making rate decisions behind closed doors based on real-time data. Warsh acknowledged that inflation risks are receding, but reaffirmed the 2% target. The new opacity has unsettled markets, which now lack the usual policy roadmaps. Fed Funds Futures place a 67% probability on a rate hike in September — a prospect that would normally sap gold’s appeal, though the metal’s recent resilience suggests that traders are focusing more on the weakening labor market for now.
Analyst forecasts reflect the crosscurrents. Deutsche Bank dropped its third-quarter target to $4,300, while technical analysts warn that a stronger-than-expected official jobs report on Friday could drag gold back below $4,000 and toward $3,800 — a level just 5% above the 52-week low of $3,901.30. A weak nonfarm payrolls print, however, would likely extend the ADP-fueled rally and keep the metal anchored above the $4,000 marker.
The dual narrative — central bank buying offering a structural backstop against a deteriorating technical picture and shifting Fed policy — leaves gold at a critical crossroads. Friday’s payrolls data will determine whether the yellow metal can sustain its fragile foothold above $4,000 or succumbs to the mounting headwinds that have defined its worst quarter in over a decade.
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