บทความยอดนิยม

TMGM Group stated that although gold is known as a safe-haven asset, the recent pullback reflects an overall increase in market risk appetite—investors’ response to the Fed’s rate cuts and a loosening U.S. labor market.
Recently, gold prices dipped briefly, but the metal has continued to rebound in choppy trade from highs near $3,900 per ounce. This move has been supported by concerns over debt levels in major economies and substantial central-bank purchases.
As rate cuts boost market liquidity and investor confidence, speculative buying has also been playing an increasingly important role.
The market expects the Federal Reserve to cut rates again this week, with a cooler labor market providing room to do so. Against this backdrop, risk assets have broadly rallied, helping U.S. equities climb to fresh record highs.
Investors appear to be updating their macro scenarios to account for different labor-market outcomes—from a hiring rebound that could reignite inflation pressures, to AI-driven productivity gains that could extend the stock market’s advance. The base case assumes the current balance of “no major hiring and no major layoffs” will persist, enabling a soft landing and further rate cuts.
Gold’s rise mirrors this broader optimism. Investors are seeking diversified allocations beyond long-duration bonds while feeling comfortable taking on more risk.
However, these moves also reflect how Fed rate cuts can support risk appetite, and given ongoing speculative accumulation, a sudden pullback in gold prices would not be surprising.
Market Analysis:
On the 4-hour chart, gold found support and then rebounded, with the MACD lines and histogram expanding below the zero line. Beyond optimism on trade developments, this latest decline in gold was also amplified by some technical selling. After prices broke a key psychological level, stop-losses from earlier long positions were triggered, sparking short-term selling and accelerating the downward move. Even so, a range of risk events remains the core driver of the bullish case for gold.








