Gold Price Forecast: Charts lower high ahead of US Nonfarm Payrolls

September 28, 2019

London (Sept 28)  Gold could post losses below a widely followed support next week, having charted a bearish lower high this week.

The yellow metal picked up a bid on Monday, as expected, and rose to a high of $1,335 on Tuesday. The bid tone, however, weakened as the week progressed with prices falling back to $1,500.

As of writing, Gold is trading around $1,500 per Oz, representing a 1.21% drop on a weekly basis. Prices hit a low of $1,487.10 earlier today.

The recovery could be associated with the reports stating that the Trump administration is considering reducing investment into China and may force exchanges to delist Chinese companies as a part of trade retaliation.

While the recovery is impressive, the safe have metal is still on track to post a weekly loss, which is not surprising as the Dollar Index, which tracks the value of the greenback against majors, is set to end the week with 0.66% gains. The American Dollar is Gold’s biggest nemesis.

Looking forward

Gold may draw haven demand if the US-China trade tensions escalate. The gains, however, could be short-lived as US Treasuries will likely attract haven demand as well, strengthening the bid tone round the US Dollar.

Apart from the trade tensions, the focus will be on the monthly Purchasing Managers’ Indices (PMIs), German Consumer Price Index and the US Nonfarm Payrolls data.

Markets may turn risk averse, sending Gold higher if China’s PMI numbers bolster fears of deeper economic slowdown. Also, the US dollar may strengthen, capping the upside in Gold if the preliminary German inflation data prints below estimates, validating the European Central Bank’s (ECB) rate decision.

That said, the main event is next Friday’s Payrolls data, which is expected to show the US economy added 140K jobs in September following a 130K addition in August. Meanwhile, the jobless rate is expected to remain steady at 3.7 percent and the Average Hourly Earnings are seen rising 0.3% month-on-month.

The Federal Reserve (Fed) cut rates earlier this month, as expected, but policymakers were split on the need for more easing in the near-term. The hawkish cut convinced many that the central bank would stand pat for the rest of the year.

That belief would be reinforced, leading to a Dollar rally and a sell-off in Gold if the payrolls and the wage growth data beats estimates.

FXstreet

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