Gold edges toward $4,200 as shutdown deal fuels aggressive December Fed cut bets
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Gold trades around $4,195 in early Asian hours on Thursday, extending its latest rebound to the highest level since October 21 as the market nudges the metal back toward the $4,200 mark.
Optimism that Congress will approve a funding bill to end the longest U.S. government shutdown and restore agency financing through January 30 is feeding into expectations of a Federal Reserve rate cut as soon as December.
Even so, a divided Fed and a full slate of speeches from Raphael Bostic, Neel Kashkari, Alberto Musalem and Beth Hammack later on Thursday could steady the U.S. dollar and test how far bullion’s rally can run.
Gold prices (XAU/USD) pushed higher to around $4,195 in early Asian trade on Thursday, leaving the market within sight of the $4,200 level and marking the highest print since October 21. The move comes as traders lean more heavily on the idea that political gridlock in Washington is finally breaking and that the Federal Reserve may soon be in a position to loosen policy.
Members of the U.S. House of Representatives have returned to debate and vote on a funding package already cleared by the Senate. The bill, backed by a group of Democrats, would end the longest government shutdown in U.S. history and restore financing for federal agencies until January 30. For investors, that holds out the promise of greater economic clarity: a reopened government means key data can resume and the policy outlook becomes easier to read.
According to Reuters, hopes that the shutdown will be lifted and the flow of economic statistics will restart are feeding speculation that the Fed could cut interest rates next month. Derivatives markets now assign a probability of almost 64% to a December rate cut, based on the CME FedWatch tool. With that kind of easing priced in, many traders judge that the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold is less of a constraint, and some are willing to pay up for bullion as a form of insurance.
Inside the central bank, though, the picture is far from settled. Fed policymakers remain split over how quickly to move toward easier policy, reflecting lingering concerns that inflation may not yet be fully tamed. Fed Governor Stephen Miran has characterized current U.S. monetary policy as too tight, arguing that cooling housing inflation should help ease overall price pressures and give the Fed more room to cut.
Others are more cautious. Atlanta Fed President Raphael Bostic said on Wednesday that he prefers to keep rates where they are until there is “clear evidence” that inflation is on a durable path back to the Fed’s 2% target. At the same time, Bostic announced he will step down as president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Atlanta early next year, a reminder that the composition of the policy-setting team will itself be shifting.
For gold traders, that backdrop makes Thursday’s speaking calendar unusually important. Remarks from Neel Kashkari, Alberto Musalem and Beth Hammack later in the day will be scrutinized for any sign that the Fed is ready to validate—or push back against—the market’s conviction on a December cut. A more hawkish tone could buoy the U.S. dollar and knock the dollar-denominated metal back from its approach toward $4,200, while a softer line would likely keep dip-buyers interested as long as the shutdown endgame appears to be moving in gold’s favor.
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