Share:
  • Duration:

Summary

In anticipation of the US Presidential Elections, rumours about the upcoming crash of the US dollar are in the market air. How these talks and other events from the recent economic agenda will impact the gold prices?
 

Share:

Follow us on Telegram

Stay updated of all the news

Join Telegram

Latest Live Videos


Follow us on Telegram

Stay updated of all the news

Join Telegram

Latest Live Videos

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD remains offered near 1.1670

EUR/USD remains offered near 1.1670

EUR/USD remains directionless on Thursday, hovering around the 1.1670 zone on the back of marginal gains in the Greenback following the release of weekly Initial Jobless Claims. Moving forward, caution is expected to dominate the sentiment ahead of Friday’s US NFP readings.

GBP/USD drops to three-day lows on USD buying

GBP/USD drops to three-day lows on USD buying

GBP/USD remains under pressure on Thursday, slipping to fresh three-day lows near 1.3430 and extending the pullback that started on Tuesday. Cable stays on the back foot as the US dollar edges maginally higher following key US data releases.

Gold meets support near $4,400

Gold meets support near $4,400

Gold remains on the back foot, down for the second day in a row and revisiting the $4,430 region per troy ounce on Thursday. The move lower in the precious metal comes in response to a better tone in the Greenback and the generalised recovery in US Treasury yields.

Pi Network flashes bearish potential as selling pressure mounts

Pi Network flashes bearish potential as selling pressure mounts

Pi Network trades above $0.2000 at press time on Thursday, following a nearly 2% decline the previous day. Centralized Exchanges have received 1.90 million PI tokens over the last 24 hours, suggesting risk-off sentiment among holders. The technical outlook for the PI token remains bearish, with a risk of a cross below the 20-day Exponential Moving Average. 

2026 economic outlook: Clear skies but don’t unfasten your seatbelts yet

2026 economic outlook: Clear skies but don’t unfasten your seatbelts yet

Most years fade into the background as soon as a new one starts. Not 2025: a year of epochal shifts, in which the macroeconomy was the dog that did not bark. What to expect in 2026? The shocks of 2025 will not be undone, but neither will they be repeated.

Here is what you need to know on Thursday, January 8:

Here is what you need to know on Thursday, January 8:

The European economic calendar will feature business and consumer sentiment data, alongsinde Eurozone PPI figures for November. In the second half of the day, weekly Initial Jobless Claims, October Trade Balance and Unit Labor Costs data for the third quarter from the US will be watched closely by market participants.

MAJORS

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures