Bank of America Says Rate Cuts Amid Elevated Inflation Position Gold for Continued Gains

Those familiar with gold as an investable asset are aware of its potential to respond favorably to reductions in interest rates. But rate cuts in the face of higher inflation? That’s an even surer bet, emphasized Bank of America recently…a bet that now has been formally placed by the Federal Reserve.

Perhaps the most oft-cited reason for gold’s tendency to strengthen in the face of declining interest rates is that as rates drop, the “opportunity cost” of holding nonyielding assets like precious metals drop with them.

There are other reasons why gold typically rises as rates fall. One reason is that the onset of a tumbling-rate cycle often means the economy is facing a downturn, a circumstance which can enhance gold’s safe-haven appeal. Plus, lower rates may accelerate currency debasement and enhance inflation risks, which also tend to improve gold’s desirability as a store of value.

But however stimulating for gold that declining rates might be, anyway, it seems they have the potential to be even more invigorating when they’re dropping while inflation is still above the central bank’s 2% target. And that historical tendency is especially relevant right now, given the Federal Reserve’s decision earlier this month to resume rate cuts comes amid what not only is a still-ongoing run of elevated inflation now in its fifth year…but comes, as well, at a time when the most recent gauges show price pressures reaccelerating.

It’s a scenario, say analysts at Bank of America, that bodes especially well for gold in the months to come.

Gold Is a Sure Bet When Rates Are Cut While CPI Remains Above 2%, Say Strategists

“The Fed usually takes a balanced approach to its dual policy goal of full employment and price stability. Hence, from a gold perspective, prioritization of the labor market over inflation matters,” explained Michael Widmer and the other metals strategists at Bank of America recently. “Since 2001, gold has pushed higher every time the Fed has cut rates when U.S. CPI (consumer price index) is above 2%.”

“In fact,” Widmer and team clarified, “excluding the period of the global financial crisis, gold has delivered an annual return of approximately 13% during periods of ‘inflationary easing.’”

As for where Bank of America sees gold heading through the near term, the next major price target eyed by strategists is $4,000, a level they expect will be reached during the second quarter of 2026.

It’s important to note, however, that analysts anticipate gold forging higher not only on the strength of a structural return to explicitly accommodative monetary policy, but also on the back of the geopolitical and fiscal uncertainty which has proved to be so supportive of the metal over the last several years. And the reason that’s important is because it underscores – and should underscore for investors – just how comprehensive and multidimensional the set of drivers powering gold higher continues to be. 

This post is created and published for general information purposes only. The Gold Strategist blog disclaims responsibility for any liability or loss incurred as a consequence of the use or application, either directly or indirectly, of any information presented herein. Nothing contained in this post – or any other post featured at this blog – should be construed as a solicitation or recommendation to engage in any financial transaction. You should seek the advice of a qualified professional before making any changes to your personal financial profile.

Economic Week in Review: Fed Finally Cuts, Retail Sales Keep Impressing, Housing Starts Sink, and More

Hello, my friends!

Without question, the biggest news of this economic week was the long-awaited and highly anticipated decision by the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC)…the policymaking arm of the Federal Reserve…to cut interest rates for the first time in nine months.

On Wednesday, the FOMC voted by a margin of 11-1 to reduce the benchmark federal funds rate by a quarter percentage point, which puts the rate’s target range at 4.00% to 4.25%.

The decision effectively serves as confirmation that policymakers as a whole have grown more concerned about the implications of a weakening labor market than a recent inflation spike believed to be induced by aggressive White House tariff policy.

“The Committee is attentive to the risks to both sides of its dual mandate,” the post-meeting statement read “and judges that downside risks to employment have risen.”

Notably, the lone dissenting vote was cast by newly installed Federal Reserve Governor Stephen Miran, who supported cutting rates by a half point.

In addition to making their rate-cut decision, policymakers updated their Summary of Economic Projections at this meeting. The formal outlook now reflects a consensus expectation of two additional quarter-point rate cuts by the end of the year, a projection that Goldman Sachs strategist Simon Dangoor serves as confirmation that “the doves on the committee are now in the driver’s seat.

On that note, traders now say they believe there’s a 92% chance the Fed will again cut rates at its next meeting in October.

Retail Sales Remain Silver Lining Amid Other Signs of Slowdown

Also this week, the government announced that retail sales were strong once again in August, a demonstration of exceptional resilience in the face of other key economic bellwethers which suggested a broad economic downturn may be looming.

Despite the emergence of an even cloudier employment picture last month as well as sinking consumer sentiment and an acceleration of price pressures, it turns out that consumers not only kept cash registers ringing in August, but did so at a pace well in excess of that expected by analysts.

According to the Census Bureau’s report released on Tuesday, retail sales climbed a robust 0.6% last month, much faster than the 0.2% pace projected by economists.

Even with automobiles and related costs stripped out, the data still pointed to a strong month of consumer activity, with sales rising 0.7%.

One especially notable feature of the upbeat results is just how broad the spending activity was in August. Of the 13 retailer categories tracked by the Census Bureau, sales increased in nine of them.

In her commentary on the numbers, Heather Long, chief economist at Navy Federal Credit Union, said, in part:

“Consumers say they are gloomy about the economic outlook, but they are still opening their wallets and spending, even on little splurges for themselves and their families.”

Still, it remains to be seen for how long consumers will keep spending if significant challenges to the economy arise from White House tariff policy and growing labor-market weakness.  

Single-Family Housing Starts Tumble to Lowest Level in Nearly 2½ Years

The following day, Wednesday, the Commerce Department checked in with a less upbeat perspective on the economy, reporting that single-family housing starts fell to their lowest level in nearly 2½ years last month amid persistently high mortgage rates and consumer concerns about the underlying strength of the economy.

Overall, housing starts tanked 8.5% in August to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.307 million units, which is 63,000 fewer than the number economists expected to see. A big contributing factor was the decline in starts of multifamily units, which tumbled 11% on the month to 403,000 units.

But the big news was the drop-off in single-family starts, a metric viewed as more representative of the housing sector’s true condition because it accounts for the vast majority of homebuilding in the U.S. Groundbreaking of single-family units fell 7.0% last month to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 890,000 units, the lowest since April 2023.

The Commerce Department’s report on building permits…an indicator of future housing demand…was disappointing, as well. Permits fell by 3.7%, to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 1.312 million, the lowest level in a little more than five years.

Analysts say that even with the resumption of rate cuts, they’re not expecting conditions to improve through the near term while Americans remain broadly pessimistic about the outlook for the economy. As Samuel Tombs, chief U.S. economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, put it:

“Consumers’ low confidence and heightened concerns about job security represent ongoing headwinds to demand. We expect residential investment to remain a drag on GDP growth at least until mid-2026.”

New York Manufacturing Contracted in September

Finally, it was reported this week that manufacturing activity in New York state declined rather significantly in September…another timely piece of evidence suggesting the economy may indeed be in the throes of a slowdown.

On Monday – two days before the Federal Open Market Committee announced its decision to cut rates by another quarter point – the Federal Reserve Bank of New York announced that its Empire State Manufacturing Survey General Business Conditions Index plunged 20.6 points this month, falling to a reading of minus 8.7 from the 11.9 posted in August.

It’s the first time since June that the index landed below the neutral level of zero that distinguishes contraction from expansion in the context of the metric.

Among the key component measures that helped tank the overall gauge is the New Orders Index, which sank a whopping 35 points to come in at minus 19.6 for the month. Another is the Shipments Index, which fell 30 points to minus 17.3.

In his commentary on the fresh numbers, Richard Deitz, economic research adviser at the New York Fed, made clear he doesn’t see conditions improving markedly anytime soon, saying:

Optimism about the outlook remained muted and employment levels are expected to be flat over the next six months.”

That’s all for now; have a wonderful weekend!

This post is created and published for general information purposes only. The Gold Strategist blog disclaims responsibility for any liability or loss incurred as a consequence of the use or application, either directly or indirectly, of any information presented herein. Nothing contained in this post – or any other post featured at this blog – should be construed as a solicitation or recommendation to engage in any financial transaction. You should seek the advice of a qualified professional before making any changes to your personal financial profile.

Silver’s Killing the Competition This Year. And Barron’s Says THIS Is Why Investors Should Expect the Good Times to Keep Rolling

In 2024, it was gold that grabbed the lion’s share of precious metals headlines, reaching 40 new all-time highs and finishing the year as one of the world’s best-performing assets.

This year, it’s silver’s turn. Famous (notorious?) for underperforming its more prestigious counterpart during the first half of metals bull markets, silver is just as well-known for its capacity to sharply outperform gold during the markets’ latter stages when investors’ attention invariably shifts to the far-cheaper and generally underbought alternative.

Whether or not that latent awakening is exactly what we’re seeing play out right now, there’s little question that silver has been not only the better performer so far this year among metals, but one of the best performing assets, overall. Since the beginning of January, silver is up roughly 49%, ahead of gold’s 41% rise and well ahead of the most popular equities indexes. Additionally, now sitting solidly above $40 per ounce, silver currently is residing at its highest price level in more than 14 years.

And according to a recent article in Barron’s, there’s more to come. The esteemed financial journal recently made note of what so far has been a banner year for silver, attributing the white metal’s success to its gold-like desirability as a geopolitical safe-haven as well as its appeal as an industrial metal.

Barron’s Sees Currently High Gold-to-Silver Ratio as Sign the White Metal Is Poised to Keep Climbing

But fortifying their optimism over silver’s near-term fortunes is how cheap the metal presently is relative to gold. Currently, the gold-to-silver ratio – which measures how many ounces of silver it takes to purchase one ounce of gold at any given time – is currently around 85. Barron’s notes the ratio has averaged 63 over the previous half-century and 70 over the more recent last two decades.

“Comparisons with the past suggest silver is undervalued relative to gold now,” Barron’s said, implying the gold-to-silver ratio is poised to drop from current levels. During a metals bull market, the likeliest way for the ratio to decline…for silver to become more valuable relative to gold…would be for the price of silver to begin rising at an accelerated pace in relation to gold.

I, too, think silver is well positioned to keep climbing from here. But while there’s no question that the gold-to-silver ratio remains significantly higher than its historical averages, I don’t believe it’s prudent to interpret that as a reliable “buy” signal or otherwise view the elevated ratio as a sign, in and of itself, that silver is destined to go higher.

Reliability of Gold-to-Silver Ratio Hurt by the Increasingly Tenuous Relationship Between the Metals

The fundamental reason I question the usefulness of the ratio as a reliable “tell” is simply that whatever real relationship gold and silver once had has become tenuous over time. The two obviously share broad characteristics as precious monetary metals, but while gold remains most highly prized as a safe haven and store of value, the majority of silver’s demand now comes from industry, as I noted earlier.

Fundamentals – Rather Than a Suspect Metric – Point to Continued Silver Strength

This is not to say I don’t expect silver to remain especially resilient through the foreseeable future. But in my estimation, that ongoing resilience will be attributable not to a suspect metric reverting to a perceived mean…but, rather, to fundamentals which include silver’s profile as a viable and far cheaper (compared to gold) safe-haven asset amid comprehensive uncertainty; the increasingly critical role silver’s anticipated to play for industry, in general…and the green-energy industry, in particular…as the world’s best conductor of electricity; and a structural silver supply deficit that’s now in its fifth consecutive year. 

This post is created and published for general information purposes only. The Gold Strategist blog disclaims responsibility for any liability or loss incurred as a consequence of the use or application, either directly or indirectly, of any information presented herein. Nothing contained in this post – or any other post featured at this blog – should be construed as a solicitation or recommendation to engage in any financial transaction. You should seek the advice of a qualified professional before making any changes to your personal financial profile.

Economic Week in Review: Consumer Inflation Rises, Producer Inflation Falls, Job Growth Suffers a Stunning Revision, and More

Hello, my friends!

Among the most highly anticipated economic data releases this week was the August edition of the consumer price index (CPI), the nation’s best-known inflation gauge, which revealed that even as Fed policymakers are expected to resume interest rate reductions shortly, the fight against troublesome price pressures remains far from over.

On Thursday, the Labor Department reported that headline, or all-items, CPI rose 0.4% for the month, 0.1 percentage point above forecast and the fastest rate since January. That acceleration bumped the annual rate to 2.9%, 0.2 percentage point faster than the pace set in July.

Core CPI, which excludes more volatile food and energy prices, also reflected inflation’s stubbornness last month, rising 0.3% for the month and 3.1% year over year.

The resilience of consumer price pressures might preclude a rate cut altogether next week if not for the now-glaring signals pointing to a slowdown in the labor market. The same day that CPI was released, the Labor Department also announced that filings for weekly unemployment compensation rose to a seasonally adjusted 263,000…the highest in nearly four years.

Addressing the counterweight to persistent inflation represented by rising labor-market uncertainty, Seema Shah, chief global strategist at Principal Asset Management, wrote:

Today’s CPI report has been trumped by the jobless claims report. While the CPI report is a tad hotter than expected, it will not give the Fed a moment of hesitation when they announce a rate cut next week. If anything, the jump in jobless claims will inject a bit more urgency in the Fed’s decision making, with Powell likely signaling a sequence of rate cuts is on the way.”

In other news this week:

Surprising Drop in August Wholesale Inflation Helps Clear Path to Rate Cut

Another reason why the latest consumer inflation numbers aren’t expected to derail a rate cut is because one day prior to their release, we learned that monthly inflation at the wholesale level actually declined in August.

On Wednesday, the Labor Department announced that the monthly producer price index fell 0.1% in August, which is a far better result than the 0.3% rise economists were expecting and a significant improvement from the 0.7% increase recorded in July.

The surprise drop went a long way to containing annual PPI, which rose “just” 2.6% in August, much slower than the 3.3% pace that had been forecast.

As for monthly core PPI – which like its consumer counterpart, strips out food and energy prices – that also fell 0.1% after analysts had pegged it landing at 0.3%.

Like annual headline CPI, annual core CPI benefited significantly from the big improvement in the monthly number, coming in at 2.8%. That’s much better than both the 3.5% rate forecast by economists and the 3.4% increase recorded in July.

In a statement following the announcement of August PPI, Chris Rupkey, chief economist at Fwdbonds, suggested the outright drop in monthly wholesale inflation is proof positive that tariff-induced price pressures remain largely MIA – and that it bodes well for a rate cut next week.

“The inflation shock that was not is rocketing markets higher as inflation barely has a heartbeat at the producer level…which shows the tariff effect is not boosting across-the-board price pressures yet,” Rupkey said. “There is almost nothing to stop an interest rate cut from coming now.”

12-Month Job Growth Through March Revised Downward by More Than 900,000 Jobs

Other big news this week included the release on Tuesday of an annual Labor Department report that this year revealed there were 911,000 fewer jobs created by the economy than first thought during the 12-month period ending March 2025.

Each year, the revisions are calculated by reconciling the results of the Labor Department’s monthly employment surveys with its much more accurate Quarterly Census of Employment and Wages. The time around, the differences between the two reports were notable to say the least: The revised number was well in excess of that which was projected by Wells Fargo economists, who were expecting to see it fall somewhere between 475,000 and 790,000 jobs. Additionally, the figure was more than 50% higher than the 2024 adjustment and the largest revision on record going back 23 years.

The stunning update underscored what have been persistent concerns about the accuracy of the data collection methods used to compile the monthly numbers as well as suspicions that the economy is weaker than some of the government’s headline gauges have suggested.

Regarding the latter, Oren Klachkin, market economist at Nationwide Financial, believes the massive downward revision is another critical piece of data that the Federal Reserve will use to justify a formal return to accommodative monetary policy:

“The slower job creation implies income growth was also on a softer footing even prior to the recent rise in policy uncertainty and economic slowdown we’ve seen since the spring. This should give the Fed more impetus to restart its cutting cycle.”

Small Business Optimism Rises in August Despite Ongoing Concerns About Labor Quality

Finally this week, the latest data from a key sentiment gauge suggests that America’s business owners remain broadly confident in their outlook for the economy despite concerns about the quality of available labor in the U.S.

On Tuesday, the National Federation of Independent Business reported that its Small Business Optimism Index rose 0.5 percentage point in August, to 100.8. It’s the eighth time in the previous 10 months since President Trump was reelected that the index has come in above its historical average of 98.

A collateral measure, the NFIB Uncertainty Index, dropped four points to 93, but remains above its historical average.

In a statement on the numbers, Bill Dunkelberg, chief economist of the NFIB, said:

“Optimism increased slightly in August with more owners reporting stronger sales expectations and improved earnings. While owners have cited an improvement in overall business health, labor quality remained the top issue on Main Street.”

On that note, 32% of business owners reported job openings they couldn’t fill last month. The NFIB said that the last time unfilled job openings dropped below 32% was in July 2020, while the country was still reeling from the economic effects of the pandemic.

That’s all for now; have a wonderful weekend!

This post is created and published for general information purposes only. The Gold Strategist blog disclaims responsibility for any liability or loss incurred as a consequence of the use or application, either directly or indirectly, of any information presented herein. Nothing contained in this post – or any other post featured at this blog – should be construed as a solicitation or recommendation to engage in any financial transaction. You should seek the advice of a qualified professional before making any changes to your personal financial profile.

Morgan Stanley Strategist: Gold Rally Suggests “Something Big Is Happening Beneath the Surface”

Among the more notable features of gold’s impressive march higher is the fact it has managed to sustain its upward momentum in the face of historically metals-adverse conditions such as surging interest rates and the flourishing of risk assets. Despite these ostensible challenges, gold has reached new all-time highs more than 70 times since just the beginning of 2024 and appreciated an astonishing 100% since January 2022, strongly outperforming the world’s most prominent equities indexes over the same period.

According to Amy Gower, head of metals and mining commodity strategy at Morgan Stanley, gold’s seemingly unprecedented demonstration of strength is evidence of an equally unprecedented intensification in the uncertainty which has been sitting at the foundation of gold’s jaw-dropping resilience.

“The Role of Gold Is Evolving in 2025”

“Gold has always been the go-to asset in times of uncertainty,” Gower said in a commentary earlier this week. “But in 2025, its role is evolving. Investors are watching gold not just as a hedge against inflation, but as a barometer for everything from central bank policy to geopolitical risk.”

“When gold prices move, it’s often a sign that something big is happening beneath the surface,” Gower added.

Gower’s reference to the “evolution” of gold’s function as both a tactical and strategic asset speaks to the degree to which the nature – including the complexity – of metals-favorable uncertainty has proved to be such a potent catalyst of gold prices over the last several years.

It is, in fact, the length, width and breadth of this uncertainty…comprised of an array of factors that includes an unsustainable U.S. fiscal trajectory, aggressive worlwide de-dollarization and the most dangerous geopolitical environment since World War II… which has generated sweeping levels of interest in the yellow metal from individual investors to central banks.

“Central banks are on track for another year of strong buying, with gold now representing a bigger share of central bank reserves than treasuries for the first time since 1996,” Gower said. “This is a strong vote of confidence in gold’s long-term value. Also, gold-backed exchange-traded funds, or ETFs, saw inflows of $5 billion in August alone, with the year-to-date inflows the highest on record outside of 2020, signaling renewed interest from institutional investors too.”

Gold Poised to Reach $3,800 by Year End, Says Gower

In addition to the foundational support for gold provided by the multidimensional uncertainty that Gower and so many others expect to persist, the strategist also said the likely resumption of rate cuts should further energize gold in the coming months, noting that “gold does tend to outperform after Fed rate cuts.”

So, what’s Morgan Stanley’s end-of-2025 price target for gold?

“From here, we see around 5% further upside to gold by year end, to $3,800 per ounce,” Gower said.

Since Amy Gower’s commentary aired a handful of days ago, gold already finds itself around $3,700, just 2.5% below Morgan Stanley’s $3,800 EOY price target. Whether it actually reaches $3,800 or even sustains its current price level remains to be seen, of course. But a couple of points are worth noting.

All Gas, No Brakes: Analysts See Gold Between $4,000 and $5,000 in 2026

For one thing, Morgan Stanley analysts by no means are alone in their robust expectations for gold to continue rising well into record territory. Numerous, highly credible analysts expect the metals bull to keep running through at least the foreseeable future…including those at Goldman Sachs, whose projections for 2026 range from $4,000 (base case) to as high as $5,000.

Moreover, practically no one in the analyst community is forecasting gold to suffer a meaningful correction anytime soon…a fact that State Street strategist Aakash Doshi says is even more revealing than the optimistic upside price targets many have proposed.

Which brings me here: Doshi’s fundamental point…the thing he believes is “revealed” by gold’s resistance to backsliding…is that the metal remains highly supported by a multitude of uncertainty-representative factors and conditions so significant that it’s all but impossible for a universally revered safe-haven asset like gold to materially decline in value right now.

That’s also the “something big beneath the surface” to which Amy Gower referred; it’s what she means when she says gold’s “role is evolving.”

And it’s why, at the end of the day, gold remains especially well-suited to continue serving as a valuable hedge and diversifier on behalf of so many investors at all levels.

This post is created and published for general information purposes only. The Gold Strategist blog disclaims responsibility for any liability or loss incurred as a consequence of the use or application, either directly or indirectly, of any information presented herein. Nothing contained in this post – or any other post featured at this blog – should be construed as a solicitation or recommendation to engage in any financial transaction. You should seek the advice of a qualified professional before making any changes to your personal financial profile.

Economic Week in Review: Nonfarm Payrolls Keep Disappointing, Job Openings Sink to 10-Month Low, Manufacturing Keeps Contracting, and More

Hello, my friends!

In what was, by a country mile, the week’s most prominent data release, the Labor Department revealed on Friday that nonfarm payrolls increased by a positively anemic 22,000 jobs in August…well below both the 75,000 jobs projected by economists and the 79,000 jobs added in July.

As for the unemployment rate itself, that ticked up 0.1 percentage point to 4.3%…the highest it’s been in nearly four years.

The fresh numbers are just the very latest sign of rapidly growing weakness in the labor market; a weakness that already was widely expected to prompt a quarter-point rate cut later this month and which now, following this latest jobs report, may have some policymakers considering a reduction by 50 basis points.

It wasn’t just the feeble August data that added to the consternation over the condition of the labor market. The report also contained a troubling downward revision to the figures for June, revealing that instead of gaining 14,000 jobs that month, the economy actually suffered a net loss of 13,000 jobs…the first outright decline since December 2020.

Major indexes fell only modestly on Friday in the wake of the news. The consensus view is that while markets obviously are concerned about what the jobs numbers say about the economy, they’re anticipating that growing signs of labor-market weakness all but ensure a rate cut by the Fed this month. For the week, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was down 0.32%, but both the S&P 500 and Nasdaq Composite finished in the black, up 0.33% and 1.14%, respectively.

Also this week:

Unemployed Outnumber Available Jobs for the First Time Since Pandemic

Other widely followed labor-market metrics released earlier in the week also implied that the jobs picture may, indeed, be in the process of darkening some.

On Wednesday, the Labor Department released the latest edition of its Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey – also known as the JOLTS report – which revealed not only that U.S. job openings fell to a 10-month low in July, but also that the number of unemployed Americans exceeded the number of available jobs for the first time since the pandemic.

According to the report, job openings in July dropped by 176,000, to 7.181 million, the lowest since September 2024 and roughly 40% below where they were at three years ago.

Of particular note is the 181,000 fewer job openings in the areas of health care and social assistance recorded in July. This marks the second straight month these sectors have seen a decline in available positions, which some observers regard as especially concerning given the degree to which job growth in these areas have buttressed the overall job market recently.

Private-Sector Jobs Number for August Reflects Pervasive Concerns About Economy

The following day, Thursday, ADP checked in with its contribution to the week’s gloomy updates on the jobs market, reporting that the private sector created just 54,000 jobs in August. That’s well below the 75,000 jobs projected by economists and significantly below the 106,000 jobs added in July.

Although ADP’s data has proved to be an unreliable predictor of the government’s nonfarm payrolls numbers which routinely follow in subsequent days, analysts say the bigger, more important issue is that each of the nation’s highest-profile labor-market gauges has reflected noticeable weakening over the course of the year so far.

“The year started with strong job growth, but that momentum has been whipsawed by uncertainty,” said Nela Richardson, chief economist of ADP. “A variety of things could explain the hiring slowdown, including labor shortages, skittish consumers, and AI disruptions.”

Whatever the culprit(s), this week’s ADP report added more fuel to the growing rate-cut fire, with Jamie Cox, managing partner for Harris Financial Group, noting:

“ADP data continue to reinforce the narrative that the rate of positive change in the labor market has slowed significantly, so you can expect the Fed to tilt its balance of risks to cut rates in September.”

Manufacturing Sector Remained in Contraction Last Month

In other news this week, the Institute for Supply Management reported on Tuesday that its Manufacturing Purchasing Managers’ Index increased modestly in August, but not enough to lift the widely followed metric out of the contraction territory in which it’s persisted since March.

According to ISM’s numbers, Manufacturing PMI increased by 0.7 percentage point last month to come in at 48.7. Although technically an improvement, the result isn’t much to crow about; the reading is two-tenths of a point less than economists were expecting and marks the sixth straight month its landed below the key level of 50 that distinguishes contraction from expansion in the nation’s manufacturing sector.

The overall index might have seen a bigger gain last month if not for largely offsetting results from two critical component measures: the New Orders and Production Indexes. While the New Orders Index jumped a little more than four points in August to land at 51.4 and squarely back in expansion, the Production Index fell by nearly the same increment, pushing that metric into contraction.

Comments from survey respondents indicate that volatile tariff policy…along with associated uncertainty in the broader economy…is making life difficult for U.S. producers, with one manufacturer saying:

“Orders across most product lines have decreased. Financial expectations for the rest of 2025 have been reduced. Too much uncertainty for us and our customers regarding tariffs and the U.S./global economy.”

Fed Beige Book Tells Tale of Impending Slowdown

Finally this week, the Federal Reserve on Wednesday published the sixth of eight Beige Books scheduled for release in 2025, with its contents seeming to underscore the growing economic uncertainty generated by the White House’s aggressive tariff policy.   

Beige Books contain more qualitative – even anecdotal – information about economic conditions across all 12 Fed districts. The insights are gathered through interviews with business contacts and other key observers in each district. Beige Books…so called because of the color of their covers…are published two weeks before each meeting of the Federal Open Market Committee and consulted by central bank officials as they consider how to proceed with monetary policy.

Among the highlights of this most recent edition was an acknowledgment by the Fed that there was “little or no change in economic activity since the prior Beige Book period,” along with suggestions that evidence of a tariff-induced slowdown is revealing itself.

Nearly all districts noted tariff-related price increases, with contacts from many districts reporting that tariffs were especially impactful on the prices of inputs,” the Federal Reserve said. Relatedly, the central bank also revealed that “across districts, contacts reported flat to declining consumer spending because, for many households, wages were failing to keep up with rising prices.”

Observers say that while the latest Beige Book serves as additional confirmation of a looming slowdown, it likely won’t make much difference to Fed policymakers who likely have already decided that a rate cut of between 25 and 50 basis points is in order when they meet again on September 16.

That’s all for now; have a terrific weekend!This post is created and published for general information purposes only. The Gold Strategist blog disclaims responsibility for any liability or loss incurred as a consequence of the use or application, either directly or indirectly, of any information presented herein. Nothing contained in this post – or any other post featured at this blog – should be construed as a solicitation or recommendation to engage in any financial transaction. You should seek the advice of a qualified professional before making any changes to your personal financial profile.

$5,000 Gold? Goldman Sachs Connects the Dots to a Stunning Price Possibility

Now that the gold futures price finally appears to be breathing easier in the rarified air above $3,500 per ounce, observers are wondering aloud as to just what might be next for the yellow metal.

The growing belief that a resumption of rate cuts could be imminent has energized chatter suggesting $4,000 gold may be around the corner. But even as many are setting their sights on $4,000, strategists at global investment banking giant Goldman Sachs are going a step further, now suggesting that the practically stratospheric $5,000 price level could come close to being achieved before the current metals bull market has reached its climax. If it happens, says Goldman, the core driver is likely to be an intensification of already-mounting concerns about Federal Reserve independence.

Goldman Analysts Say Damage to Fed Independence Would Push Gold Considerably Higher

In a note, the analyst team…which includes Samantha Dart, Goldman’s co-head of global commodities research, said, “A scenario where Fed independence is damaged would likely lead to higher inflation, lower stock and long-dated bond prices, and an erosion of the dollar’s reserve-currency status.”

“In contrast,” the strategists added, “gold is a store of value that doesn’t rely on institutional trust.”

The Goldman team says $4,000 is their baseline price target for gold over the next year. That target price rises to $4,500 if the analysts’ tail-risk scenario comes to pass, one that sees central bank gold demand increase to 110 metric tons per month and inflows into gold-backed exchange-traded funds revisit the record levels set during the pandemic.

And $5,000 gold? The analysts believe we could see it if a profound loss of faith in U.S. Treasuries…triggered in no small way by persistent and growing concerns about Fed independence…drives just 1% of the privately owned Treasury market (investors other than the federal government and the Federal Reserve) into the metal.

“Gold Remains Our Highest-Conviction” Trade in the Commodities Space

“We estimate that if 1% of the privately owned U.S. Treasury market were to flow into gold, the gold price would rise to nearly $5,000 an ounce, assuming everything else constant,” the Goldman analysts said. “As a result, gold remains our highest-conviction long recommendation in the commodities space.”

It remains unclear at how much risk Fed independence really is, although there’s no shortage of notables who’ve gone on the record to voice their concerns about it. In a recent interview, for example, European Central Bank President Christine Lagarde suggested that focused efforts by President Trump to push out Fed Chair Jerome Powell or Fed Governor Lisa Cook would pose “a very serious danger for the U.S. economy and the world economy.”

As for me, rather than deciding how much stock to put in the threat of a compromised Fed or even in specific price targets, I remain focused on what I believe is the broader message about gold being transmitted by Goldman analysts and others right now: Namely, that the unprecedented uncertainty which has helped power the price of gold higher by more than 100% over the last three years is poised to continue through the foreseeable future. And that as long as it does, investors of all stripes would do well to view gold with the same “conviction” with which Goldman’s esteemed analysts see it.

This post is created and published for general information purposes only. The Gold Strategist blog disclaims responsibility for any liability or loss incurred as a consequence of the use or application, either directly or indirectly, of any information presented herein. Nothing contained in this post – or any other post featured at this blog – should be construed as a solicitation or recommendation to engage in any financial transaction. You should seek the advice of a qualified professional before making any changes to your personal financial profile.

Leading Independent Analyst Says $4,000 Gold Is Next

Throughout much of this year, the price of gold had been hanging around $3,500 per ounce, occasionally peeking its head above the vaunted price level while failing to surpass it in any meaningful way.

That changed at the end of August, when the gold futures price once again powered above $3,500 – and, this time, rode the latest burst of momentum past $3,600 for the first time ever.

For many analysts, gold’s forceful breaching of what had proved to be a rather stubborn level of price resistance in the shorter term has effectively confirmed what they already “knew” intuitively: that the gold bull – along with the comprehensive uncertainty feeding it – remain very much intact.

And that the $4,000 price target many have eyed for some time remains a sound, viable projection.

“Investors Have Not Missed the Boat”

“We have been waiting for a spark to ignite gold, and when we look back, we will see that this was the time,” Michele Schneider, chief strategist at MarketGauge.com, recently said. “From a technical perspective, the longer a consolidation phase persists, the stronger the breakout move is likely to be.”

“I would say $3,800 to $4,000 is extremely practical, without getting too hyperbolic,” she added. “That would probably be my next legitimate target before we might see some profit-taking. Even at these prices, investors have not missed the boat. When investors start buying the strength – buying on these important breakouts – that’s when parabolic moves happen.”

Although Schneider believes there’s a multitude of drivers fueling the uncertainty which lies at the heart of gold’s upward momentum, she suggests the Fed’s apparent shift to prioritizing labor-market concerns over current inflation could be the spark which pushes the metal the rest of the way to $4,000.

In fact, since Fed Chair Jay Powell aired his unexpectedly dovish take on monetary policy at Jackson Hole, traders’ expectations of a September rate cut have surged from a little more than 70% to nearly 100%.

Schneider: Gold’s Surging Over “a General Lack of Faith” the Fed Will Keep Fighting Inflation

“ What we’re seeing is that there’s just a general lack of faith that the Fed is going to do what it needs to do, that the government knows what it’s doing,” Schneider said, referring to the growing likelihood the central bank will resume rate reductions in spite of ongoing price pressures. “ There’s this flight into gold because there are worries all over the place about fiat currency.”

Indeed, while rate cuts are known to strengthen gold by lowering the opportunity cost of holding the metal, it’s really the potential fiscal implications associated with cutting rates in the face of higher inflation that are poised to send the metal soaring from here.

As another respected strategist, Aakash Doshi of State Street Investment Management, recently told ABC News:

“The Fed is cutting because of a weak labor market but inflation is still elevated. That supports alternative fiat assets like gold.”

Whether gold reaches $4,000 in relatively short order remains to be seen. But if it doesn’t, neither should anyone reasonably expect it to lose much ground, given both the number and potency of the metals-favorable catalysts in play right now.

This post is created and published for general information purposes only. The Gold Strategist blog disclaims responsibility for any liability or loss incurred as a consequence of the use or application, either directly or indirectly, of any information presented herein. Nothing contained in this post – or any other post featured at this blog – should be construed as a solicitation or recommendation to engage in any financial transaction. You should seek the advice of a qualified professional before making any changes to your personal financial profile.

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