Gold steady, oil eases: markets wait on the Fed's number
Gold holds near $4,100, crude softens as more barrels flow, and investors wait for this week's PCE inflation reading.
A markets-in-waiting kind of day. Gold held firm, hovering around $4,100 an ounce, clinging to the previous session’s gains. It didn’t spike, it didn’t tumble — it sat tight, like someone waiting for the next signal.
And the signal has a name: the US PCE price index, due this week and the Federal Reserve’s favourite inflation gauge. After the Fed held rates at its last meeting but struck a tougher tone, investors want to know whether inflation leaves room for cuts down the line. Hence the tense calm.
Oil eases off
In crude, the story is relief. Early signs of progress in the US-Iran peace talks calmed nerves, with Washington granting Tehran a 60-day licence to sell oil on international markets. With more barrels entering the system — and traffic through the Strait of Hormuz normalising — the pressure on prices loosened.
What it means for your wallet
Plain translation: fewer nasty surprises at the petrol pump for now, and a gold price that’s still the safe harbour of choice for the jittery. For the moment, the market has its arms folded — but one off-script inflation number and the quiet could end in a hurry.
Illustrative · Photo: Robert Lens / Pexels