Gold down, dollar up: the wrap on a jittery week
Gold is heading for a third straight weekly loss, the dollar hit a one-year high and Goldman trimmed its forecast. What moved the markets.
If you kept an eye on gold this week, you’ll have noticed the shine dimmed a little. The metal slid to around $4,150 an ounce on Friday, its lowest in a couple of weeks, and it’s on track for a third straight weekly drop. It’s not a crash — more a cooling-off after months of heat.
The culprit has a name: the dollar. It climbed to a one-year high after the US Federal Reserve left rates unchanged but talked tougher. Nine of the Fed’s nineteen policymakers now pencil in at least one rate hike before the year is out. When the dollar is strong and rates threaten to rise, gold — which pays no interest to whoever holds it — loses some of its pull.
What it means
Even Goldman Sachs reworked the math, cutting its year-end forecast to $4,900 an ounce from $5,400. Note that’s still well above today’s price — nobody is calling time on gold.
For the household savings pot, the lesson is the usual one: gold moves in lurches and reacts to the dollar and rates as much as to any crisis. If you hold it as long-term insurance, weeks like this are a shrug. If you bought hoping for a quick win, it’s a reminder this stuff goes down too.
Illustrative · Photo: crazy motions / Pexels