Analysts have a message for gold investors before the Fed meeting


Gold investors are heading into one of the most important weeks of the year. The Federal Reserve meets March 17 and 18. What Chair Jerome Powell says next Wednesday could move bullion sharply in either direction.

Spot gold was struggling to hold the $5,050 level Friday, March 13. It is down more than 1% on the week as a stronger dollar weighs on the metal.

This is not a routine Fed meeting. Oil is above $100. The February jobs report badly missed expectations. Core inflation is still running sticky at 2.5%. It is also Powell’s second-to-last meeting before his term expires in May. The dot plot update released Wednesday will be read very carefully.

Gold’s relationship with the Fed is simple in theory. When the central bank cuts rates, real yields fall, the dollar weakens, and gold rises. When the Fed holds or signals higher for longer, the opposite happens.

The problem right now is that the data are pulling in two directions. Oil above $100 argues for the Fed staying put. But February’s jobs report showed the economy shedding 92,000 positions, with unemployment ticking up to 4.4%. That argues for easing.

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J.P. Morgan analysts describe the current setup as “geopolitical fear clashing with a resurgent dollar.” It is a rare scenario that makes predicting gold’s near-term direction genuinely difficult.

Here’s where analysts broadly agree: Powell’s language matters as much as the rate decision itself. Words like “transitory” versus “persistent” when describing the oil shock could move gold by hundreds of dollars in a single session.

The base case on Wall Street is that the Fed holds rates at 3.5 to 3.75 percent on Wednesday, March 18. The dot plot will likely signal fewer cuts than previously projected.

Goldman Sachs has already pushed its first rate cut call back to September. Rate-cut expectations for 2026 have collapsed from where they stood just weeks ago. Before the Iran war began, markets were pricing in a June cut at near certainty. That confidence is now gone.

If Powell stresses that energy costs complicate the inflation picture, real yields would likely climb and the dollar would strengthen. That combination historically pressures gold. The metal already fell sharply from its all-time high of $5,595 set in January. A hawkish Powell could accelerate that correction.



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