Gold holds steady near $4,200 amid Fed rate cut expectations

December 4, 2025

LONDON (December 4) Gold (XAU/USD) holds steady on Thursday, moving quietly within the $4,160-$4,260 range as investors adopt a wait-and-see approach ahead of the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) monetary policy meeting next week.

At the time of writing, XAU/USD is trading around $4,200, with the cautious market backdrop keeping the metal in a consolidative phase after it climbed to a six-week high earlier this week.

Markets largely expect the Fed to lower interest rates at the December 9-10 meeting. That conviction firmed after Tuesday’s US economic data showed a surprise decline in ADP Employment Change, underscoring weakening labour conditions.

The ISM Services PMI also offered a mixed signal. The headline showed steady expansion in November, but the underlying components pointed to cooling inflation pressures, softer demand, and still-weak hiring. Taken together, the report added to the view that the Fed has room to ease policy further.

Attention now turns to the November US Challenger Job Cuts report and the latest weekly Initial Jobless Claims, both due later today.

Market movers: Weak USD, Fed cut bets support Gold; rising global yields cap gains

  • The dovish Fed outlook continues to weigh on the US Dollar (USD) and provides underlying support for Gold. The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback's value against a basket of six major currencies, is trading around 98.80 at a one-month low as the Greenback extends its decline for a seventh straight day.
  • Geopolitical risks remain in play, with little progress reported in the ongoing Russia-Ukraine peace talks aimed at ending the war. The lack of meaningful breakthroughs keeps sentiment fragile, adding a layer of support for safe-haven assets such as Gold. US President Donald Trump said on Wednesday that the path ahead for Ukraine peace efforts is “unclear,” despite what he described as “reasonably good” discussions between Russian President Vladimir Putin and US envoys. Trump said he had been briefed on the talks, but emphasized that the next steps remain uncertain. A White House official said the envoys will meet Ukrainian officials in Miami on Thursday.
  • Rising global Treasury yields, triggered by a sharp sell-off in Japanese government bonds after hawkish signals from the Bank of Japan (BoJ), are rippling through global debt markets. Japan’s 10-year yield climbed above 1.9% on Thursday, its highest level since 2007. The move spilled over into US Treasuries, where the 10-year yield pushed back toward 4.08%, reversing the previous day’s decline and tempering demand for non-yielding assets like Gold.
  • The ISM Services PMI rose to 52.6 in November, beating expectations of 52.0 and reaching a nine-month high, signalling steady expansion in the sector. However, the details painted a softer picture. The Prices Paid index fell sharply to 65.4 from 70.0, New Orders eased to 52.9 from 56.2, and the Employment index, while improving to 48.9 from 48.2, remained in contraction territory. Separately, ADP Employment Change fell by 32,000 in November, sharply missing expectations for a 5,000 increase.
  • According to the CME FedWatch Tool, markets assign an 89% probability to a 25 bps rate cut at next week’s meeting.

FXStreet

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