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Gold Holds Steady As Fed Cuts Interest Rates

Gold Holds Steady As Fed Cuts Interest Rates

Posted December 11, 2025 at 10:00 am

Finimize Newsroom
Finimize

Gold prices climbed after the Fed delivered its first rate cut in years, but investors are keeping a close watch with the economic outlook in flux.

What’s going on here?

Gold prices nudged up to $4,244 an ounce for February delivery after the Federal Reserve delivered its first rate cut in three years and left investors on edge about what comes next.

What does this mean?

The Federal Reserve trimmed US interest rates by 0.25%, moving its target range down to 3.50%–3.75%. That move sent gold up by nearly $19 for the day, building on recent momentum and keeping prices tightly clustered around the $4,200 mark. Lower rates pulled the dollar down, with the ICE dollar index dipping to 98.32, and sent Treasury yields softer too—both tailwinds for gold, which typically shines when yields and the dollar weaken. Still, with US jobless claims climbing to 236,000 and Fed officials seeing only limited scope for more cuts through 2026, traders are keeping their guard up. Saxo Bank pointed out that optimism has pushed gold and other metals higher lately, but shifting central bank signals make for an uncertain road ahead.

Why should I care?

For markets: Gold’s glow wavers with shifting rates and labor signals.

Gold’s gains have tracked sliding rates and yields, factors that usually boost the metal. But a spike in jobless claims hints at a cooling labor market, which could push the Fed toward more rate cuts—or spark more volatility if the trend reverses. Traders are split: gold’s narrow two-week trading range shows some betting on further upside, while others pause after a solid run over the past year.

The bigger picture: Central bank moves ripple across commodities and markets.

A weaker dollar and falling yields can benefit commodities across the board, not just gold, and push investors to look beyond US assets. But with the Fed signaling a careful approach, market swings could stick around—making global markets in 2025 as much about central bank moves and job data as about asset prices themselves.

Originally Posted December 11, 2025 – Gold Holds Steady As Fed Cuts Interest Rates

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