NEW YORK, December 30, 2025, 12:43 ET — Regular session
- Gold Fields shares rose about 2.5% in midday New York trading, recouping part of Monday’s drop.
- Gold prices rebounded after a sharp selloff tied to higher futures margin requirements and year-end profit-taking.
- Traders are watching the Fed’s December meeting minutes later Tuesday for clues on the 2026 rate path.
Gold Fields Limited shares rose about 2.5% to $44.69 in midday trading on Tuesday, recovering some ground after the prior session’s selloff. The U.S.-listed ADR traded between $44.07 and $45.47.
The bounce matters because gold-linked assets have been swinging sharply into year-end, a period when thin liquidity can exaggerate price moves. Gold and silver slid hard on Monday after the CME raised margin requirements — the cash traders must post to hold futures positions — prompting profit-taking. Investopedia
Investors also have a fresh catalyst later on Tuesday: minutes from the Federal Reserve’s December policy meeting, which are expected to show how divided officials were after their latest rate cut. Rate expectations can move the dollar and bond yields, two key drivers for gold because bullion pays no interest. Reuters
Spot gold — the metal’s cash price — was up about 0.9% at $4,369.59 an ounce by late morning after Monday’s steep drop, Reuters reported. “Things have stabilised somewhat today,” said Peter Grant, vice president and senior metals strategist at Zaner Metals. Reuters
Gold Fields had closed Monday at $43.60, down 6.36% on the day after bullion tumbled from record highs, according to MarketWatch data. MarketWatch
Other major gold miners were also higher in midday trade, with Newmont up about 2.5%, Agnico Eagle Mines up about 1.3% and AngloGold Ashanti up about 2.6%.
Moves in miners often amplify swings in the underlying metal because changes in the gold price can flow quickly into margins, especially when costs are relatively fixed quarter to quarter.
Gold Fields, headquartered in South Africa, operates mines and projects across Australia, Canada, Chile, Ghana, Peru and South Africa, according to the company. Its U.S. shares trade as an ADR, a receipt that represents shares in a foreign company. Goldfields
For traders, the near-term question is whether Tuesday’s gold rebound holds after Monday’s margin-driven shakeout, or whether volatility triggers another round of de-risking across the complex.
Broader markets also remain sensitive to shifting rate-cut expectations and geopolitical headlines, forces that helped jolt gold and the dollar in late-year trading, Reuters reported. Reuters


