
Gold Jumps on Weak US Jobs Data as Fed-ECB Policy Divergence Widens
A sharp slowdown in American hiring pushed gold to a five-week high and trimmed bets on further Federal Reserve tightening, even as some economists warn US inflation pressures persist.
The US economy added just 57,000 non-farm jobs in June, far below the 110,000 forecast, data released on Thursday showed. The miss triggered an immediate repricing: spot gold surged 1.4% on Friday to $4,179 an ounce, its highest since 23 June, and was on track for a 2.2% weekly gain—its first in five weeks. The dollar weakened, making bullion cheaper for holders of other currencies.
Weaker labour demand reduces the pressure on the Federal Reserve to raise interest rates aggressively, and lower rates diminish the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold. Traders now assign a roughly 54% probability to a rate increase at the Fed’s September meeting, down from 66% before the payrolls report, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Analysts in London noted that markets are also scaling back expectations for further tightening early next year.
Yet the picture is not uniform. At an economic conference in Aix-en-Provence, France, senior economists from Allianz and BNP Paribas argued that the Fed still has work to do. Ludovic Subran of Allianz pointed to inflation likely peaking above 3.7%, fuelled by artificial-intelligence investment, fiscal stimulus and energy costs linked to the US-Israeli war with Iran. “The Fed could have to raise rates in September,” he said. His counterpart at BNP Paribas maintained that the case for further hikes “remains intact.” The divergence with the eurozone is stark: euro-area inflation fell to 2.8% as oil prices retreated on signs the conflict may de-escalate, and several economists judged the European Central Bank’s tightening cycle probably over.
Fed Chair Warsh, speaking at an ECB forum in Sintra, Portugal, refused to offer forward guidance, vowing to “disappoint” anyone expecting the central bank to tolerate inflation above 2%. He stressed the Fed’s independence and said rate decisions would be made behind closed doors at the 28 July meeting. Markets still price a 70% chance of a hike by mid-September. The next factual milestones are the Fed’s two-day meeting starting 28 July and the ECB’s subsequent policy announcement.
| Arab Levant-Maghreb press | 0.00 | neutral |
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| Iranian & allied press | 0.00 | neutral |
| Indian & South Asian press | 0.00 | neutral |
The gold market reacts to weak US data, but volatility worries local traders.
By linking global gold trends to the concrete experiences of Moroccan jewelers, a sense of immediacy and local relevance is created.
The articles omit the analysts' expectation of a new Fed rate hike, which would cast doubt on the sustainability of the rise.
Gold rises thanks to weak US data, and the domestic market follows with higher prices despite the closure for mourning.
By embedding global data within a context of internal political events (the leader's funeral), the local impact is normalized and the source's credibility is reinforced.
The articles omit the analysts' expectation of a new rate hike, focusing instead on bullish sentiment and local conditions.
The gold correction was a technical adjustment due to a strong dollar and rate hike expectations.
By using technical language and citing macroeconomic factors, the analysis presents itself as objective and data-driven, detached from emotions.
The article omits the recent rebound caused by weak US jobs data, which would challenge the narrative of a sustained correction.
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