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Posted January 27, 2026 at 10:30 am
After hitting fresh records, gold and silver dipped on profit-taking, but strong safe-haven demand and a weaker dollar have traders watching the Fed for the next move.
Gold dipped after racing past $5,000 an ounce, as traders took profits and looked ahead to this week’s Federal Reserve decision.
February gold futures slipped to about $5,118/oz after another record, while silver also backed off its own high. The move looks like a pause, not a reversal: gold is still up roughly 17% over the past month and about 83% over the past year. Demand hasn’t just been financial: ETF inflows have picked up and central banks have kept adding to reserves. A softer US dollar has helped too, since it makes dollar-priced metals cheaper for non-US buyers – and uncertainty is keeping the safe-haven bid alive.
For markets: The Fed can sway gold even without a rate move.
Markets expect the Fed to hold rates steady, but the statement and forecasts could reset expectations for when cuts start. That matters because lower yields reduce the opportunity cost of owning gold, which doesn’t pay interest. With the dollar index near its lowest since early 2022 and Treasury yields off their peaks, a dovish tilt could keep supporting precious metals – while a surprise hawkish tone could jolt them.
The bigger picture: Gold is back to being a stress signal.
This rally isn’t just about inflation: it’s also been fueled by safe-haven demand and official-sector buying. When central banks and ETFs absorb supply at the same time the dollar weakens, prices can become extra sensitive to fresh signs of slower growth or policy uncertainty. In other words, even small macro shocks can show up quickly in metal markets.
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Originally Posted January 27, 2026 – Gold Takes A Breather After Crossing $5,000
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