Gold falls below $4,000 as US–China trade thaw eases safe-haven demand

October 27, 2025

NEW YORK (October 27) Gold price slides below $4,000 for the first time since mid-October, hitting a daily low of $3,971 as risk appetite improved due to easing tensions between the US and China in regard to the trade war. Nevertheless, expectations that the Federal Reserve (Fed) would resume its easing cycle could prompt investors to buy the yellow metal.

Yellow metal slips nearly 3% despite firm Fed rate cut expectations

XAU/USD trades at $3,995, losing 2.80% amid a trading session that is also witnessing a weaker US Dollar and falling US Treasury yields. Negotiations between US and Chinese officials over the weekend delivered a framework for a deal between Washington and Beijing, which would pause American tariffs on Chinese products in exchange for no rare earth mineral controls on US companies.

US President Donald Trump is expected to meet China’s President Xi Jinping on Thursday.

Bullion is also facing headwinds as the People’s Bank of China (PBoC) paused its Gold buying program, as reported by data from Hong Kong. The report showed that September’s net exports to China fell 17.6% MoM.

A higher probability of an interest rate reduction by the Fed at the October 28-29 meeting could drive Gold prices higher as the yellow metal typically performs well amid a low interest rate environment.

Expectations that the Fed will cut rates at the October 28-29 meeting are at 96%, according to the Prime Market Terminal interest rate probability tool.

Daily market movers: Gold retreats despite falling US Treasury yields

  • Bullion prices are ignoring that the US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the performance of the buck versus six currencies is down 0.07% at 98.84.
  • The US 10-year Treasury note yield has dropped one basis point to 3.997%. US real yields — which correlate inversely to Gold prices — are diving near one and a half basis points to 1.707%.
  • US and Chinese officials reunited in Malaysia last weekend, unveiling a slew of agreements to ease trade tensions. On this, US President Trump said that “I really feel good” about a deal with China.
  • Officials discussed tariffs, shipping fees, fentanyl and export controls over two days in Malaysia. Consequently, global equity markets rallied, triggered Gold’s plunge of more than 2.50% on Monday.
  • US Consumer Price Index (CPI) rose 3.0% in the 12 months through September, coming in just below expectations of 3.1% and up slightly from August’s 2.9%. The core CPI, which excludes food and energy, increased 3.0% YoY — one-tenth lower than in the prior months, signaling a modest easing in underlying inflation.
  • JPMorgan projected that Gold prices could average $5,055 per ounce by the fourth quarter of 2026, driven by sustained investor appetite and robust central bank purchases. The bank assumes combined demand from both segments will average roughly 566 tonnes per quarter next year.

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