Gold prices hovered near an eight-week high on Tuesday, consolidating just under $3,451.53 as traders await fresh catalysts. With the market finding near-term support from a weaker U.S. dollar and declining Treasury yields, bullion remains buoyed by geopolitical concerns and dovish expectations for the Federal Reserve’s upcoming policy announcement.
At 11:50 GMT, XAU/USD is trading $3394.53, up $9.31 or +0.27%.
Rising tensions between Israel and Iran have re-ignited safe-haven buying, pushing gold higher in recent sessions. Jordan’s King Abdullah warned the European Parliament that Israel’s widening conflict with Iran could escalate into a broader regional crisis, intensifying investor demand for gold. Market participants are watching for further developments as geopolitical headlines continue to support risk-averse positioning.
Han Tan of Exinity Group noted that gold retains an upward bias on signs of deepening conflict in the Middle East. “Barring knee-jerk spikes on a worsening geopolitical conflict, bullion bulls’ quest for pushing spot prices sustainably above $3,500 may only be fulfilled once the Fed signals a sooner-than-later rate cut,” Tan said.
The Federal Reserve’s policy decision, due Wednesday, will be closely scrutinized for any dovish signals. With markets currently pricing in two rate cuts by year-end, any confirmation or deviation from this expectation could provide the next directional push for gold. Lower interest rates tend to support non-yielding bullion by reducing the opportunity cost of holding it.
Citi revised its short- and long-term gold price targets lower, now projecting a decline to below $3,000/oz by late 2025 or early 2026 on expectations of falling investment demand and improving global growth. The bank cut its 0-3 month and 6-12 month targets to $3,300 and $2,800 respectively, but sees prices holding between $3,100–$3,500 in Q3 as geopolitical risks and U.S. fiscal concerns provide support.
In its bullish scenario, gold could breach $3,500/oz in Q3 on stronger hedging and investment flows. In the bearish case, prices may dip below $3,000/oz as global tensions ease and U.S. growth firms—but Citi assigns only a 20% probability to each extreme outcome.
Gold remains underpinned by geopolitical concerns and dovish Fed expectations, with near-term price action likely to stay constructive. Technical support lies at $3,348.54, while the $3,310–$3,301 cluster is key for any deeper correction.
A close above $3,451 would open the door for a test of the record $3,500.20. Traders should stay alert to Fed commentary and further Middle East headlines for confirmation of the next leg. Bias remains bullish while gold holds above $3,300.
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Mr.Hyerczyk is a technical analyst, market researcher, educator and trader. Jim is an expert in the area of patterns, price and time analysis, Forex and stocks.