Gold stumbles and the Fed changes its tune: what to watch this week
A third straight weekly drop for gold, oil above $92, and a Federal Reserve now talking about raising rates. The dollar says thanks.
Anyone used to gold only going up just got a cold shower: the metal closed the week near $4,150 an ounce, its third straight weekly decline.
Blame a mix that’s changed its mood. A stronger dollar — at a one-year high — makes gold pricier for buyers in other currencies and dulls its shine. Behind that sits the big surprise of the moment: the US Federal Reserve has hit the brakes on rate cuts and switched tone. Nine of its 19 officials now pencil in at least one rate hike by year-end, where back in March the talk was still of cuts. Markets now put the odds of a hike by September at around 70%.
And oil?
Still expensive and jittery. Brent is holding above $92 and WTI hovers near $90 — high levels that feed inflation and, sure enough, justify the Fed’s harder line.
What to watch
This week brings June PMIs, US first-quarter GDP and inflation-expectations data. For Portugal, it’s the knock-on effect that counts: a strong dollar and pricey energy touch everything, from what we pay at the pump to what the Bank of Portugal writes in its bulletins. You don’t have to trade gold to feel it.
Illustrative · Photo: Alesia Kozik / Pexels