Gold prices tumbled Friday as hawkish comments from Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell dampened hopes of near-term monetary easing. The XAU/USD pair dropped 2.7% to a seven-day low of $3,015, before recovering modestly to $3,029, reflecting broader market concerns over inflation and liquidity stress.
Powell warned that new U.S. tariffs could reignite inflation, potentially delaying interest rate cuts. “Tariffs are likely to raise inflation in the coming quarters; more persistent effects are possible,” Powell said in his keynote. His comments immediately sent Treasury yields and the U.S. Dollar Index (DXY) higher, exerting downward pressure on gold.
Compounding the volatility, a Financial Times report revealed that hedge funds faced their largest margin calls since the Covid-19 crash, spurred by asset price dislocations following recent geopolitical escalations.
Key Stats:
- XAU/USD: -2.7%, now at $3,029
- DXY: +1.14% to 103.09
- U.S. 10-Year Real Yield: ↓4 bps to 1.718%
- March NFP: +228K jobs vs. 135K forecast
Hedge Funds Forced to Liquidate
Market strain intensified as liquidity dried up. According to the Financial Times, hedge funds responded to margin pressures by selling liquid assets—including gold—to meet demands. Analysts, including Suki Cooper of Standard Chartered, highlighted gold’s dual role: a store of value and a liquidity tool.
“The metal is often sold to cover losses elsewhere,” Cooper said. “It’s not uncommon to see gold dip after major risk-off events.”
Adding fuel to the fire:
- FTSE 100 declined 1.5%
- U.S. yield curve inversion deepened, with 3-month Treasury yields outpacing 10-year notes by 25 bps
- Money markets still price in 1% of Fed cuts by mid-2025
What to Watch Next Week
Traders are preparing for another active week, with FOMC meeting minutes, multiple Fed speeches, and fresh inflation data scheduled for release. The focus will shift to Consumer Price Index (CPI) and Producer Price Index (PPI) prints, which could validate or challenge Powell’s inflation outlook.
Technically, gold faces a key test near the $3,000 mark. If sellers push the metal below that level, the next downside target lies at the 50-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) of $2,937.
Gold Support and Resistance Levels:
- Support: $3,000 → $2,937 → $2,900
- Resistance: $3,100 → $3,150
With sentiment now tilted bearish and risk aversion spreading, gold’s path forward will largely hinge on incoming inflation data and the tone of Fed communications.