Market Update · July 6, 2026

Gold Holds Above $4,100 as Jobs Data Gives the Fed Pause

Gold kept most of its jobs-report rebound as softer payrolls and lower oil prices cooled the rate-hike pressure that had been weighing on bullion.

A gold bar on a dark desk in front of a XAU/USD chart holding above the $4,100 level, with jobs and Fed rate cues in the foreground.

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Quick takeaway

The July 6 gold story is not a new breakout; it is the market testing whether last week's jobs-driven relief can hold above the $4,100 area.

What happened

Gold started the new week by holding onto most of last week's rebound.

After the July 2 jump above $4,100, gold was still trading near the mid-$4,100s on Monday as investors digested the weak June jobs report and a fresh drop in oil prices. Barron's reported early Monday that New York gold futures were up about 1% near $4,166, while later market coverage showed front-month gold futures settling at $4,155.10.

That makes today's move different from Thursday's breakout. July 2 was the shock: weak payrolls knocked back Fed-rate fears and pushed gold through a visible level. July 6 is the follow-through test: can gold keep that support when the first reaction has passed?

Why it matters

Gold is still being priced through the Federal Reserve lens.

The Bureau of Labor Statistics said U.S. nonfarm payroll employment rose by only 57,000 in June, while the unemployment rate was 4.2%. That softer hiring number made it harder for markets to price a more aggressive Fed path with the same confidence.

The oil move helped too. Lower crude prices can ease inflation pressure, and lower inflation pressure usually gives the Fed more room to wait. For a non-yielding asset like gold, that matters because higher interest rates make cash and bonds tougher competition.

In plain English: gold is getting support because the market is less certain that the Fed needs to stay hawkish right now.

What this means for readers

What to watch next

The next useful test is whether gold can stay above $4,100 without needing another weak data surprise.

Watch Fed-rate probabilities, Treasury yields, the U.S. dollar, oil prices, and the next inflation readings. If those signals keep cooling, the July rebound can look less like a one-day relief move and more like a sturdier reset.

If inflation pressure returns or Fed officials push back against easier market pricing, gold could quickly move back into the same rate-pressure story that dominated late June.

For InGold.today readers, the simple takeaway is this: last week gave gold room to breathe. This week will show whether that breathing room holds.

Sources

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