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Gold News: Gold Price Slides as Fed Rate Expectations Shift Gold Market Outlook

By
James Hyerczyk
Updated: Mar 3, 2026, 13:20 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • Gold price tumbles as U.S. dollar demand surges, shifting short-term gold market sentiment bearish.
  • Rising crude oil prices fuel inflation fears, reshaping Fed rate expectations and gold price future.
  • CME FedWatch shows rate cuts repriced, reducing support for gold rally momentum.
Gold Price Forecast

Gold Loses Its Shine as Dollar Demand Takes Over

Spot gold and April Gold Futures are sharply lower on Tuesday as demand for the U.S. Dollar is outpacing demand for the precious metal. I’ve said numerous times that I consider gold to be more of an investment than a safe-haven asset, and this could be one of those times when it is neither. Clearly, we’re not seeing the safe-haven demand with the war in full-throttle, and it looks as if it’s losing some of its luster as an investment today. We’re not even seeing it used as a hedge against a stock market sell-off.

Margin Calls May Be Forcing the Selling

What we could be experiencing is gold liquidation due to stock market margin calls. As stocks decline, exchanges ask leveraged investors to put up more money to cover their positions. If they need to raise cash, they’ll sell their most profitable positions to get it. Based on this year’s early performance, gold looks like a viable candidate for margin call money.

The Dollar’s Rise Is More Than Just Sentiment

Daily US Dollar Index (DXY)

As far as the dollar is concerned, yes, it is trading at a one-month high and poised to move higher, making gold less attractive to foreign buyers. Today, some analysts are saying it is being supported by “cautious market sentiment.” That sounds like a catch-all phrase to me. However, if you dig deeper, then you’ll have to conclude that inflation fears are more likely the main driver of the dollar’s bullish move.

With soaring crude oil prices raising inflationary risks, dollar traders may be raising their interest rate expectations. And I believe the Fed is in a better place to raise rates if they have to than the other major central banks like the European Central Bank (ECB) and the Bank of England (BOE).

Backing this assessment is the CME Group’s FedWatch tool that is showing the Fed will hold rates in March, and is 60% likely to do the same in June. The odds were previously just below 45%. Gold traders have been pricing in at least two rate cuts in 2026, but if inflation starts to rip higher, that assessment will have to be taken off the board. Today’s weakness may be reflecting that possibility.

Why the Pros Are Trimming Gold Positions

Professionals don’t simply look at charts and technical indicators like small speculators do. They also look at yields to determine where they can get the best return on their investment with minimal risk. So they are likely trimming gold positions in anticipation of a better return from a possible rate hike.

Technical Picture: Uptrend Intact, but Under Pressure

Daily Gold (XAU/USD)

Technically, gold is in an uptrend, but falling fast. If gold traders are flipping from safe-haven, headline-driven buyers to value-seeking investors, then a pullback to the 50-day moving average is not out of line. Currently, minor retracement levels at $5143.89 and $5002.31 stand in the way as support, but if they fail, we could see a test of the 50-day MA at $4833.30.

It really all depends on how long crude oil prices remain elevated because they will drive the inflation fears that could eventually lead to a rate hike and a stabilized, stronger U.S. Dollar. This scenario will be short-term bearish in my opinion.

More Information in our Economic Calendar.

About the Author

James Hyerczyk is a U.S. based seasoned technical analyst and educator with over 40 years of experience in market analysis and trading, specializing in chart patterns and price movement. He is the author of two books on technical analysis and has a background in both futures and stock markets.

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