Trend Overview
The 4-hour chart shows a well-defined uptrend since mid-August, with consistent higher highs and higher lows. Gold remains comfortably above its 200-period moving average, which signals that the broader momentum remains bullish.
A rising trendline also supports the upward movement, reinforcing the bullish bias unless price decisively breaks below it.
Key Support and Resistance Levels
Immediate resistance: $3642 – $3670, where price recently faced selling pressure.
Immediate support: $3600, marked as a key pivot zone.
Trendline support: $3550–3570, aligning with dynamic support.
Stronger support: $3500 psychological zone.
Candlestick and Indicators
Recent candles reflect profit-taking pressure after testing $3640+. The Stochastic Oscillator is currently near oversold levels, hinting at a potential short-term rebound if $3600 holds.
A rebound above $3600 could fuel another rally toward $3670, with a breakout opening the path to $3700–$3710.
A failure to hold $3600 may trigger a deeper correction toward the trendline ($3550–3570) or even $3500.
Macro Drivers Supporting Gold
US Dollar and Yields
Gold has benefitted from a softer US Dollar in recent weeks. Expectations that the Federal Reserve is nearing the end of its rate-hike cycle have pressured US Treasury yields lower, boosting demand for non-yielding assets like gold.
Global Economic Concerns
Uncertainty around global growth, particularly slowing momentum in China and the Eurozone, continues to fuel safe-haven demand. Investors view gold as a hedge against potential economic instability.
Geopolitical Tensions
Ongoing geopolitical risks (trade disputes, regional conflicts, and election-year uncertainty in the US) provide additional support for gold, reinforcing its role as a hedge against volatility.
Central Bank Demand
Central banks, particularly in emerging markets, remain net buyers of gold, adding further demand-side support to prices.
Risks to the Bullish Outlook
If the US Dollar stages a strong recovery on better-than-expected US economic data, gold could face renewed downward pressure.
A sharp rebound in bond yields would also weaken the attractiveness of non-yielding assets.
Conversely, signs of stronger global growth may reduce safe-haven demand in the short term.
Gold remains firmly in a bullish trend, though short-term correction is underway. The key pivot level at $3600 will decide the next move:
Holding above $3600 favors bullish continuation toward $3670–$3710.
Breaking below $3600 may trigger a deeper retracement toward $3550–$3500.
From a fundamental perspective, softer Fed expectations, global economic risks, and steady central bank demand continue to support the long-term bullish case for gold.