Gold Holds Firm Near Record Highs Amid Trade Tensions And Geopolitical Risks

  • Gold stabilizes after a modest pullback from record highs.
  • Trade tensions, geopolitical risks and US shutdown fears keep safe-haven demand elevated.
  • Traders refrain from aggressive bets ahead of the Federal Reserve’s interest rate decision.

Gold (XAU/USD)takes a breather on Tuesday after surging to a fresh all-time high near $5,111 on Monday. The metal remains underpinned by strong safe-haven demand as investors stay cautious amid lingering geopolitical tensions and broader economic uncertainty.

At the time of writing, XAU/USD trades around $5,080, holding firm after a modest pullback from record highs that briefly dragged prices below the $5,000 mark.

Trade tensions remain front and center, with US President Donald Trump’s tariff agenda once again unsettling markets. Trump’s aggressive trade rhetoric and repeated use of tariffs as an economic weapon are weighing on the US Dollar (USD).

While US equity markets have so far remained resilient, growing concerns over stretched valuations are keeping investor sentiment fragile. At the same time, fears of another US government shutdown are mounting, with lawmakers facing a January 30 funding deadline. Against this backdrop, Bullion continues to attract defensive flows.

However, the metal is struggling to attract strong follow-through buying, as traders remain reluctant to place fresh directional bets ahead of the Federal Reserve’s (Fed) interest rate decision due on Wednesday.

Looking ahead, the US economic docket is relatively light on Tuesday, with the ADP Employment Change 4-week average, the FHFA House Price Index and the Conference Board’s Consumer Confidence survey scheduled for release.
 

Market movers: Tariffs, Fed, geopolitics in focus

  • US President Donald Trump said on Monday he plans to raise tariffs on South Korean imports to 25% from 15%. In a social media post, Trump blamed South Korea’s legislature for not approving a trade agreement reached last year, adding that higher tariffs would apply to autos, lumber and pharmaceuticals.
  • The move followed a fresh escalation over the weekend, when Trump warned he could impose sweeping 100% tariffs on all Canadian goods if Ottawa proceeds with a trade agreement with China.
  • The US Dollar Index (DXY), which tracks the Greenback's value against a basket of six major currencies, is trading near four-month lows around 96.88.
  • Fed leadership is also in focus, with President Trump expected to announce his decision on the next Fed Chair in the coming days. Markets remain wary that Trump’s choice could steer the central bank toward a more dovish policy path, following his repeated criticism of current Chair Jerome Powell for not cutting interest rates more aggressively.
  • US-Iran tensions resurfaced after reports that the US Navy’s aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln and accompanying warships arrived in the Middle East, fueling concerns over a possible escalation with Iran. Iranian officials have warned of retaliation if the US takes military action.
  • On the monetary policy front, markets are fully pricing in the Fed to keep interest rates unchanged at the 3.50%-3.75% range on Wednesday. Attention will instead turn to the Chair Jerome Powell's post-meeting press conference for fresh guidance on the monetary policy path, with traders currently expecting around two rate cuts later this year.
     

Technical analysis: XAU/USD consolidates below $5,100, upside bias intact
 

(Click on image to enlarge)


From a technical perspective, dip-buying continues to keep the broader outlook tilted to the upside, although bulls are struggling to secure a decisive break above the $5,100 psychological mark.

On the 4-hour chart, the 21-period Simple Moving Average (SMA), near $5,004, is acting as immediate dynamic support. A sustained break below the $5,000 handle could weaken the near-term structure, exposing the $4,900 region, followed by the 50-period SMA around $4,831 as the next downside targets.

The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) histogram has slipped below zero and is expanding in negative territory, indicating that the MACD line has moved beneath the Signal line and downside momentum is building.

Meanwhile, the Relative Strength Index (RSI) stands near 70, easing back after previously pushing deep into overbought territory, suggesting that bullish momentum is moderating.


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