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Gold clings to above $1,900 after softer June U.S. jobs report

Published 07/07/2023, 01:25 PM
Updated 07/07/2023, 03:54 PM
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Investing.com -- Gold isn’t about to lose its $1,900 handle yet — not with a U.S. labor market that finally may be cooling.

Futures of the yellow metal neared the mid-$1,900 point on Friday while the spot price of bullion was not too far away from that after a softer-than-expected U.S. jobs report for June suggested some tempering in the Fed’s hawkishness when the central bank’s policy-makers sit for their next rate review in three weeks.

The front-month August gold contract on New York’s Comex settled at $1,932.50 an ounce, up $17.35, or 0.9%, on the day. For the week, the benchmark gold futures contract was virtually flat, gaining just over $3. Friday's high of $1,940.90 for August gold compared with its three-month bottom last week at $1,900.60.

The spot price of gold, which reflects physical trades in bullion and is more closely followed than futures by some traders, was at $1,926.90. The intraday high of $1,926.90 contrasted with last week’s three-month low of $1,893.01.

“Gold came under pressure…but managed to hold above $1,900 and even recoup some of its losses,” said Craig Erlam, analyst at online trading platform OANDA.

Gold rallied after the Labor Department reported that U.S. employers added 209,000 nonfarm payrolls in June, a number that came in below economists’ estimates for the first time in 16 months, signaling progress in the Federal Reserve’s bid to fight inflation with higher interest rates.

Wall Street’s economists had expected a jobs growth of 225,000 for last month, from a previously published 339,000 for May which the Labor Department revised down to 306,000 on Friday.

Fed seeks more evidence of inflation cooling; One jobs report alone won’t do it

The unemployment rate remained unchanged in June at 3.6% while wages expanded by 0.4% from a 0.3% growth in May. Fed officials have said employment and wage growth have to cool significantly to effectively restrain the worst inflation the United States has encountered in four decades.

Inflation, as measured by the Consumer Price Index, or CPI, grew 4% year-on-year in May, slowing from a 40-year high of 9.1% in June 2022.

The Fed’s tolerance for inflation is, however, just 2% per annum. Since March 2022, the central bank has raised interest rates by 10 times, adding a total of 5% to the previous pandemic-era rate of 0.25%. While the Fed paused its rate hike cycle last month, there is speculation it could resume that when it meets on July 26 for its next rates review.

To be sure, Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee told CNBC on Friday that one should “never make too much out of any one month of jobs numbers”.

“It is clear that the job market is still very strong but cooling,” he added. “I haven't seen anything that says 1 or 2 more rate hikes this year is wrong.”

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