Today: 2 July 2026
Gold slips under $4,000 with traders watching Fed signals
2 July 2026
2 mins read

Gold price tops $4,100 after U.S. jobs data revisions fuel Fed-rate hopes

BENGALURU, July 2, 2026, 21:37 (IST)

  • Spot gold climbed 2.4% to $4,126.97 an ounce after U.S. payrolls for June came in below estimates.
  • April and May payrolls got revised down by 74,000 jobs, wiping out the 57,000 gain seen in June.
  • Jobless claims held at 215,000. The focus was on possible rate cuts, not job loss fears.
  • Central banks added a net 41 tonnes of gold to reserves in May, valued at roughly $5.4 billion using Thursday’s spot rate, according to the .

Gold jumped past $4,100 on Thursday after the latest U.S. payrolls data pointed to a softer labor market than markets had been expecting. The headline was a 57,000 job gain for June, but the Bureau of Labor Statistics cut April and May’s numbers by a combined 74,000, so the revisions wiped out more jobs than were added last month. Economists in the Reuters poll were looking for a 110,000 increase.

Spot gold climbed 2.4% to $4,126.97 an ounce as of 9:00 a.m. EDT. U.S. gold futures gained 1.4% to $4,139.20. The dollar index dropped 0.7%.

David Meger, director of metals trading at High Ridge Futures, said “The lower-than-expected jobs number” weakened the case for more rate hikes. He added that gold “has a tendency to perform better in lower interest rate environments.” Reuters

U.S. labor/rate gaugeLatest readingInvestor point
Nonfarm payrolls57,000 gained; Reuters poll was for 110,000Payrolls missed consensus by 53,000
April/May revisionsRevised down by 74,000Revisions erased more jobs than June added
Average hourly earningsUp 0.3% from prior month; up 3.5% on yearEarnings growth kept inflation fears down
Initial jobless claims215,000, a decline of 1,000Layoffs still low
Fed futuresSeptember hike odds down to 60%, from 75% pre-payrollsTraders cut rate-hike odds

The table shows hiring is slowing, but layoffs aren’t picking up. For investors, that mix gives gold traders some reason to argue for rate cuts, yet leaves the recession call murky.

Eric Merlis, who co-heads global markets at Citizens, said “the labour market is still adding jobs and wages show few signs of accelerating,” according to Reuters.

ADP payrolls data pointed to more cooling in the labor market. Automatic Data Processing Inc. reported U.S. private companies hired 98,000 workers in June, with annual pay up 4.4%. “The pace of hiring is telling a story of both supply and demand,” said Dr. Nela Richardson, ADP’s chief economist. “For now, the overall effect is a slowdown in job creation.” ADP Media Center

FOREX.com analyst Fawad Razaqzada warned not to read too much into a single payroll number as a Fed signal. “One month’s worth of data will never be enough. The Fed’s focus is on inflation,” he told Kitco. Kitco

Central banks boosted gold reserves by 41 tonnes in May, according to World Gold Council numbers out Thursday. That’s about $5.4 billion worth of bullion at Reuters’ spot price. The official sector stayed active as a buyer for another month.

Central bank activity in MayNet change2026 year-to-date, where stated
Polandup 18 tonnesup 64 tonnes
Chinaadded 10 tonnesadded 25 tonnes
Uzbekistanup 9 tonnesup 33 tonnes
Kazakhstanadded 7 tonnesadded 20 tonnes
Singaporeadded 4 tonnesNot stated
Russiadown 6 tonnesdown 34 tonnes
Turkeydown 3 tonnesdown 81 tonnes

Central bank gold buying stayed focused in May, with Poland topping the list. China increased reserves for a 20th month. Russia and Turkey kept selling, according to WGC numbers.

Oil slipped, taking some heat off inflation worries. Brent crude dropped 1.3% to $70.66, and U.S. West Texas Intermediate lost 1.5% to $67.54 after Qatar said U.S.-Iran talks on the Strait of Hormuz moved forward. Both contracts touched lows not seen since late February.

Ole Hansen at Saxo Bank said earlier oil prices drifted lower as talks in Qatar went on. “There is a chance that we could see even lower prices,” he said. Reuters

Gold bulls face a risk that the recent rally depends on Fed bets. CME Group Inc.’s FedWatch tool showed fed funds futures traders dropping odds of a September hike to around 60%, down from roughly 75% before the jobs data. Physical demand is relying on official buyers, who bought 41 tonnes in May.

Jerzy Lewandowski is a senior markets editor at TS2.tech covering stocks, artificial intelligence, semiconductors and global financial markets. He studied economics at the University of Warsaw and previously worked in investment analysis before moving into financial journalism. His daily coverage focuses on the trends and events that matter most to investors worldwide.

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