Gold prices pulled back on Thursday from their latest milestone as investors recalibrated expectations following the Federal Reserve’s cautious approach to future rate cuts, despite delivering the widely anticipated quarter-point reduction.
The gold price rose to a record high of US$3,707.34 per ounce shortly after the decision but quickly fell back to the US$3,650 level. By Thursday morning, spot gold had extended its decline, trading 0.6% lower at $3,637.41 per ounce as of 0636 GMT, while December gold futures slumped 1.2% to $3,671.30.
The precious metal’s retreat came as currency markets responded to what analysts characterized as a more hawkish tone from Federal Reserve officials than many had expected. Following the central bank’s decision to cut rates for the first time since December 2024, the federal funds rate will sit at a new range of 4% to 4.25%.
“The general message from the Fed was slightly to the hawkish side on interest rates; they didn’t really enthusiastically endorse lower rates,” explained Edward Meir, an analyst at Marex. The lack of dovish enthusiasm prompted investors to trim bullish bets on gold, as the dollar gained ground against major currencies.
The greenback’s strength proved to be the immediate headwind for gold, with the dollar index rising 0.4% to extend gains against rival currencies. This development makes gold more expensive for holders of other currencies, dampening international demand for the precious metal.
Fed Chair Jerome Powell‘s characterization of Wednesday’s move as a “risk-management cut” in response to weakening labor market conditions suggested a measured, data-dependent approach rather than the beginning of an aggressive easing cycle. Powell emphasized the Fed remains in a “meeting-by-meeting situation” regarding future rate decisions, signaling no predetermined path for monetary policy.
However, financial markets continue to price in further easing, with traders now assigning a 90% probability to another 25 basis point cut at the Fed’s October meeting, up from 74.3% just a day earlier, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.
The gold market’s recent volatility reflects the metal’s exceptional performance in 2025. The price of gold has gained 41.6% since January 1. This stellar run has been driven by expectations of lower real interest rates, persistent concerns about inflation, and ongoing geopolitical tensions that have reinforced gold’s safe-haven appeal.
Technical analysts suggest the market may be due for a broader correction after its meteoric rise. “I think over the short term, we are probably a little bit overbought here, and we could retrace a bit further, maybe to the $3,600 mark,” Meir noted, pointing to profit-taking pressures after gold’s relentless advance.
The precious metals complex showed mixed action Thursday, with silver spiking as high as US$42.24 per ounce following the meeting, still trading near 14-year highs. However, silver subsequently fell 0.6% to $41.40, while platinum managed a modest 0.5% gain to $1,371.60. Palladium edged down 0.2% to $1,152.24.
Investment demand showed signs of cooling, with SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest gold-backed exchange-traded fund, reporting a 0.44% decline in holdings to 975.66 tonnes on Wednesday from 979.95 tonnes the previous day.
Looking ahead, market attention turns to the Bank of England’s policy announcement later Thursday, where rates are widely expected to remain unchanged at 4%. The juxtaposition between Fed easing and BoE stability could further influence currency dynamics and gold’s trajectory.
Despite the near-term pullback, many analysts remain constructive on gold’s longer-term prospects, citing the fundamental drivers that propelled the metal to successive records throughout 2025.
The interplay between monetary policy, currency movements, and geopolitical uncertainties continues to shape what has been a remarkable year for the ancient store of value.
WHAT YOU SHOULD KNOW
Gold prices retreated from record highs above $3,700 after the Federal Reserve’s quarter-point rate cut came with unexpectedly cautious language about future easing. The Fed’s measured stance strengthened the dollar, making gold more expensive for international buyers and triggering profit-taking after the metal’s extraordinary 41.6% gain this year.
While markets still expect another rate cut in October, the central bank‘s “meeting-by-meeting” approach suggests the aggressive easing cycle many gold investors hoped for may not materialize, potentially capping the precious metal’s near-term upside despite its strong fundamental drivers.






















