Gold soars to $3,682 record as Fed week sparks easing bets

September 15, 2025

NEW YORK (September 15) Gold prices on Monday rallied past the previous record high of $3,674, hitting $3,682 and poised to challenge the $3,700 level in the near term. Traders are setting up for the Federal Open Market Committee's (FOMC)monetary policy meeting on September 16-17. Expectations for a rate cut are high, therefore, US Treasury yields tumbled on Monday. At the time of writing, XAU/USD trades at $3,681, up by over 1%.

Bullion rallies over 1% with traders eyeing September 16–17 Fed cut

It's Federal Reserve (Fed) week once again, and Gold prices are reflecting a resumption of the Fed’s easing cycle amid a scenario of mixed data. Inflation remains high, but the revision of payrolls last Tuesday, revealing that job gains between April 2024 and March 2025 were overstated by 911K, triggered fears of deterioration in the labor market.

Hence, last week’s data and the sudden pivot by Fed Chair Jerome Powell at the Jackson Hole Symposium in late August, opened the door to a 25-basis-point (bps) rate cut. Despite this, there is a minority that projects a 50 bps reduction.

Alongside the decision, Fed officials will unveil its latest economic projections and the infamous “dot plot,” in which the board depicts the fed funds rate path moving forward.

In the meantime, Bullion prices have rallied to a new all-time high, underpinned by the fall in US Treasury yields and the US Dollar, which sits near one-week lows.

Ahead this week, the docket will feature US Retail Sales on Tuesday before the Fed’s policy decision on Wednesday.

Daily digest market movers: Gold rallies as US yields tumble

  • The US Senate is poised to vote on Dr. Stephen Miran, President Trump's nominee to the Federal Reserve, on Monday. If confirmed, this will allow him to join this week’s policy meeting.
  • US President Donald Trump posted on this social network that the Fed should cut “bigger than he (Powell) had in mind.”
  • Last week’s University of Michigan (UoM) Consumer Sentiment poll showed that Americans are growing pessimistic about the economy, as the Consumer Sentiment Index dipped from 58.2 to 55.4. Inflation expectations for one year were unchanged at 4.8%, while for five years they rose from 3.5% to 3.9%.
  • Deutsche Bank expects the Fed to cut interest rates by 25 bps in all three remaining meetings this year, meaning that the fed funds rate will reach the 3.50%-3.75% range.
  • The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the buck’s performance against a basket of six currencies, is down 0.33% at 97.29.
  • US Treasury yields are surging, with the 10-year Treasury note up three and a half basis points (bps) to 4.034%. US real yields — calculated by subtracting inflation expectations from the nominal yield — rose nearly four basis points to 1.674% at the time of writing.

FXStreet

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