Gold prices dropped toward $4,450 per ounce on Wednesday after a stronger-than-expected US jobs report reinforced expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates elevated for longer, dampening appeal for the non-yielding precious metal.

Spot gold fell 0.79% to around $4,451.60 per ounce, retreating from recent highs above $4,500 as traders scaled back bets on an early Fed rate cut. The decline comes after the US labor market showed continued resilience, with the latest employment data surprising to the upside and reducing pressure on policymakers to ease monetary policy soon.
Why It Matters
Gold’s pullback highlights the metal’s sensitivity to interest rate expectations. When rates stay higher for longer, opportunity costs rise for holding non-yielding assets like gold, pressuring prices downward. The strong jobs report also strengthened the US dollar, which inversely correlates with gold prices.
The US economy added significantly more jobs than analysts forecast in the latest nonfarm payrolls report, while the unemployment rate held steady at historically low levels around 4.3%. April payrolls rose 115,000, beating the consensus estimate of 62,000, and job openings jumped to 7.618 million in April, the highest since June 2024.
Background Context
Gold reached an all-time high of $5,589.38 per ounce on January 28, 2026, surging past $5,000 for the first time amid geopolitical tensions, central bank buying, and inflation hedging demand. The metal has since pulled back from those records but remains well above pre-2025 levels.
The Federal Reserve currently holds its benchmark rate at 3.5% to 3.75%, having projected one rate cut in 2026 at their March meeting. Goldman Sachs Research forecasts two more cuts in 2026, potentially in March and June, which would bring the funds rate to a terminal level of 3% to 3.25%. However, resilient labor data may push markets to scale back bets on a June cut, with some traders now pricing in only a 60% probability of easing at that meeting.
