Gold prices weakened in Asian trading on Thursday, pulling back from sharp gains earlier in the week as investors reassessed risk ahead of key U.S. labor market data. A steadier U.S. dollar and profit-taking activity reduced appetite for bullion, which had surged on geopolitical concerns and rate-cut speculation.
Spot gold fell 0.5% to $4,436.62 per ounce by early GMT trading, while U.S. gold futures declined 0.4% to $4,442.86 per ounce. The pullback reflects a pause rather than a reversal, as traders locked in profits after gold touched multi-session highs earlier in the week.
The U.S. Dollar Index, which measures the greenback against a basket of major currencies, held firm after two consecutive sessions of gains. A stronger dollar typically pressures gold prices by making the metal more expensive for investors using other currencies.
Payroll Data Holds the Key for Fed Policy
Investor focus is firmly on Friday’s U.S. nonfarm payrolls report, a critical indicator for assessing the strength of the labor market and the future direction of Federal Reserve policy.
Market participants remain cautious as the data could reshape expectations around interest rates:
- Weaker job growth may reinforce bets on Federal Reserve rate cuts
- Lower interest rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like gold
- Softer yields typically enhance gold’s role as an inflation and volatility hedge
While gold has historically benefited during periods of monetary easing, uncertainty around the timing and scale of potential rate cuts is keeping traders on the sidelines in the short term.
Venezuela Tensions Cushion Gold’s Downside
Geopolitical developments are helping to limit losses in gold, providing a counterweight to macroeconomic pressure. Escalating U.S.–Venezuela tensions have revived safe-haven demand amid concerns over global energy supply and diplomatic fallout.

On Wednesday, U.S. forces seized two oil tankers linked to Venezuelan crude exports, including one operating under a Russian flag. U.S. officials said the move was aimed at enforcing sanctions and disrupting oil shipments that allegedly fund Venezuela’s government.
Russia condemned the seizure as “blatant piracy,” according to reports, adding another layer of geopolitical friction to already strained global relations.
Elsewhere in metals markets:
- Silver slid 2.3% to $76.32 per ounce
- Platinum dropped 4.3% to $2,207.60 per ounce
- LME copper eased 0.3% to $12,854.20 per metric ton
For now, gold remains caught between a resilient dollar and rising geopolitical risk, with Friday’s payrolls report expected to determine the metal’s next decisive move.


