Every time the Fed meets, my phone blows up. Friends, clients, random people from Telegram groups — all asking the same thing: "Lin, what does this mean for gold?"
The connection between Fed policy and gold prices is not complicated. But there is a lot of noise out there. Let me cut through it.
The Basic Chain
Fed signals rate hike → USD strengthens → Gold (priced in USD) becomes more expensive for foreign buyers → Demand drops → Gold price falls.
That is the simplified version. The real world has more layers, but if you understand that chain, you understand 80% of the moves.
Why "Expectations" Matter More Than the Actual Decision
Here is something most beginner guides do not tell you. Gold does not react to rate hikes themselves. It reacts to changes in expectations about rate hikes.
Think about it. By the time the Fed actually raises rates, the market has already priced it in over the preceding weeks. The move happens when expectations shift — like when Walsh hinted at hikes and half the committee agreed.
That is why gold dropped over $100 in hours. It was not the hike. It was the surprise that hikes might come sooner than expected.
What Makes This Cycle Different
In previous cycles, the Fed hiked because the economy was overheating. Strong economy, higher rates, gold dips. Standard story.
Right now the picture is murkier. The economy is not clearly overheating. Inflation is not surging. But the new Fed chair seems to want to normalize rates regardless. That uncertainty — not the rate level itself — is what is keeping gold under pressure.
What I Tell Beginners
Stop obsessing over every Fed headline. Instead, watch these three things:
- The dollar index (DXY). If DXY is climbing, gold will struggle. Simple as that.
- Real yields. When inflation-adjusted bond yields rise, gold loses its appeal. Check the 10-year TIPS yield.
- Market pricing of rate probabilities. The CME FedWatch tool shows what the market expects. If you see a sudden jump in hike probability, expect gold to sell off.
Most of my trading decisions come from watching these three inputs, not from reading news headlines. Headlines are noise. Rate expectations and dollar strength are signal.
A Personal Note
I have traded through four Fed tightening cycles now. The first one (2015–2018) cost me a lot of money because I kept fighting the trend. I thought "gold is cheap, it has to bounce." It did not bounce for three years.
The lesson? Do not fight the Fed. When the central bank is hawkish, gold tends to struggle. You can still trade it — but trade the range, do not buy and hold expecting a breakout.
If you understand nothing else from this article, understand this: gold and rate expectations move in opposite directions. Learn to read the rate outlook and you will stop getting blindsided by moves like this week's drop.