Gold Price Now (Dec. 15, 2025, 3:30 PM EST): Spot Gold Holds Near $4,320 as Markets Weigh Fed Cut Bets, Ukraine Talks, and Tuesday’s U.S. Jobs Data

Gold Price Now (Dec. 15, 2025, 3:30 PM EST): Spot Gold Holds Near $4,320 as Markets Weigh Fed Cut Bets, Ukraine Talks, and Tuesday’s U.S. Jobs Data

Gold prices are trading in the low $4,300s per ounce late Monday afternoon in New York, with investors juggling three competing forces: a softer U.S. dollar and easing yields that typically lift bullion, fading safe-haven urgency tied to progress in Ukraine peace discussions, and a looming slate of U.S. economic releases that could reset expectations for Federal Reserve policy.

As of about 3:17 p.m. ETspot gold was $4,324.15 per ounce, up 0.40% on the session, according to JM Bullion’s live pricing.  [1]

Gold price today: Where spot gold and the day’s range sit right now

After a strong run into mid-December, the market is showing classic late-session two-way trade: buyers still defend dips, but fresh highs are meeting profit-taking.

  • Spot gold “now” (late afternoon ET): hovering around $4,320–$4,330/oz based on the latest timestamped retail spot feed.  [2]
  • Day’s trading range: roughly $4,285 to $4,351 per Kitco’s intraday range data.  [3]
  • Intraday tone: early strength faded into a more measured grind, with bullion still close to multi-week highs.

This matters for readers tracking gold price now because it highlights that Monday’s move is not just a straight “risk-off” bid—gold is being pulled by both macro tailwinds and event-driven headwinds.

What moved gold on Dec. 15: Dollar, yields, and a key geopolitical twist

Two core macro drivers supported the metal early: a weaker dollar and lower Treasury yields, both of which tend to improve gold’s appeal because bullion is priced in dollars and doesn’t pay interest.

But by the U.S. afternoon, Reuters reported that spot gold was up 0.2% at $4,309.82 by 1:55 p.m. ET (after being up more than 1% earlier), while U.S. gold futures settled at $4,335.2. Reuters also tied the intraday pullback to profit-taking and the idea that progress in Russia–Ukraine peace discussions can dampen safe-haven demand when traders perceive reduced geopolitical risk.  [4]

At the same time, the calendar is doing what it always does in December: tightening the market’s focus. Reuters noted traders are watching Tuesday’s U.S. non-farm payrolls report and retail data, and that markets were pricing a 78% chance of a rate cut in January 2026 via the CME FedWatch tool.  [5]

The “why” behind today’s volatility: Fed expectations are still the main engine

Gold’s 2025 surge has been powered by a simple macro equation:

  • Lower expected real yields (or lower rates ahead) → stronger gold demand
  • Dollar weakness → higher dollar-denominated commodity prices
  • Geopolitical risk → safe-haven flows that can overwhelm short-term technicals

Today’s headlines are amplifying that equation rather than rewriting it. Reuters described gold rising to a more than seven-week high around $4,344.40/oz earlier Monday, with gold futures up near $4,377.40, attributing the strength to a weaker dollar and lower U.S. yields, while markets looked ahead to the next round of U.S. labor-market signals.  [6]

Silver’s record run is adding fuel to the precious-metals narrative

Gold isn’t moving in isolation. Silver’s explosive 2025 rally is drawing new attention to the whole complex—and sometimes pulls incremental money into gold as the “less volatile cousin.”

Reuters reported silver recently hit a record high of $64.65 and remained near that zone Monday.  [7]
Kitco commentary also flagged that silver pushed above $64/oz and was tracking a ~10% weekly gain, citing ETF inflows, momentum trading, and tight physical supply as accelerants.  [8]

When silver gets this hot, it can affect gold in two ways:

  1. Sector lift: more headline attention brings more money into precious metals broadly.
  2. Relative value debate: some investors rotate from silver into gold on “stretch” moves.

Demand-side support: ETFs, central banks, and record consumption signals

A major reason dips keep getting bought is that “structural” demand hasn’t gone away—even as tactical traders take profits.

Barron’s noted that gold has soared in 2025 (up more than 60% on the year in its framing), with demand supported by gold-backed ETF inflows and central-bank purchases. Barron’s also cited global gold demand reaching 1,313 tons in the three months ending October, underscoring that this rally is not purely speculative.  [9]

That same piece highlighted how the move has spilled over into equities tied to bullion, with major miners among beneficiaries.  [10]

Technical outlook: Key levels traders are watching into year-end

For many readers searching gold price today or XAU/USD, the practical question is whether gold can clear the psychological ceiling around $4,400—or whether year-end positioning triggers a pullback.

Several technical desks published key levels today:

  • DailyForex (Dec. 15) kept the overall trend bullish, listing support levels around $4,310 / $4,270 / $4,200 and resistance around $4,365 / $4,390 / $4,470. It also framed the big question as whether gold can stabilize above $4,400 heading into 2026[11]
  • FXEmpire (Dec. 15) argued gold is pressing toward the record zone and identified the record high at $4,381.44 as the breakout reference point; it also cited weaker yields and a soft dollar as key supports.  [12]
  • Another FXEmpire update warned of near-term hesitation: gold struggled to hold above $4,350 and could drift toward $4,250 if it slips back below $4,300[13]

In plain English: $4,300 is the battlefield, and $4,400 is the headline-maker.

Forecasts and big-picture calls: Is $5,000 gold in play for 2026?

Today’s forecasts cluster into two camps:

The bullish camp: higher highs if rate cuts continue

FXEmpire’s broader outlook suggested that a clean move above $4,400 could open the door to $4,500, and it even floated $5,000/oz next year as a realistic scenario if gold prints fresh highs and the uptrend remains intact.  [14]

Separately, Kitco highlighted a Société Générale call envisioning a gold rally to $5,000 in 2026 (and framing it as potentially outperforming the U.S. dollar and bonds).  [15]

The caution camp: volatility and profit-taking are real

Even within bullish narratives, analysts repeatedly point to the same near-term risks:

  • Hotter inflation or stronger jobs data → higher yields, firmer dollar, pressure on gold
  • Geopolitical de-escalation → reduced urgency for safe havens
  • Late-year positioning → sharp “air pockets” when leveraged longs unwind

Reuters explicitly highlighted profit-taking and liquidation alongside the geopolitical angle as reasons gold pared gains Monday afternoon.  [16]

Global snapshot: India’s gold outlook and why it matters

Gold is a global market, and regional price action can influence physical demand (especially in price-sensitive regions).

In India, The Times of India reported analysts were watching a critical band around Rs 1,35,000–1,36,000 per 10 gramsas a near-term range that could shape the next directional move.  [17]

Even for U.S.-based readers, this matters because sustained resilience in major physical markets can help put a floor under global pullbacks.

What to watch next for gold price now: The next 24 hours

If you’re following gold price now into Tuesday, three items are most likely to move the needle quickly:

  1. U.S. non-farm payrolls (Tuesday) — could swing rate-cut probabilities and real yields.  [18]
  2. U.S. retail data (Tuesday) — influences growth expectations and the Fed narrative.  [19]
  3. Ukraine peace-talk headlines — any shift in perceived geopolitical risk can reprice safe-haven flows fast.  [20]

Gold’s late-day posture on Dec. 15 can be summed up simply: the market is still broadly bullish, but the next decisive push—toward new highs above $4,400 or back toward deeper support—likely depends on what Tuesday’s U.S. data does to yields, the dollar, and rate-cut expectations.  [21]

References

1. www.jmbullion.com, 2. www.jmbullion.com, 3. www.kitco.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.reuters.com, 7. www.reuters.com, 8. www.kitco.com, 9. www.barrons.com, 10. www.barrons.com, 11. www.dailyforex.com, 12. www.fxempire.com, 13. www.fxempire.com, 14. www.fxempire.com, 15. www.kitco.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. timesofindia.indiatimes.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com, 21. www.reuters.com

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