Monday - 8.18.25: Gold held steady Monday, up $1.50 at $3,420.00, while silver slipped $0.229 to $38.83 in quiet late-summer trade. Markets continue digesting Fed Chair Powell’s Friday signal of a possible September rate cut, though divisions within the Fed and lingering inflation concerns temper expectations.
Tuesday - 8.19.25: Gold climbed $16.50 to $3,434.20 Tuesday, a two-week high on safe-haven demand after President Trump moved to fire Fed Governor Lisa Cook, a move she is contesting. Silver slipped $0.028 to $38.69, while global markets showed mild unease, with stocks softer overseas, Treasury yields ticking higher, and the dollar weakening.
Wednesday - 8.20.25: Gold inched $3.00 higher to $3,436.00 Wednesday, erasing earlier losses on mild safe-haven demand tied to political pressure on the Fed, while silver slipped $0.146 to $38.465. Markets are bracing for Nvidia’s earnings report, a potential volatility trigger across stocks, commodities, and broader financial markets.
Thursday - 8.21.25: Gold hit a three-week high and silver a five-week peak Thursday, lifted by technical buying and a weaker U.S. dollar. December gold rose $12.60 to $3,461.30, while September silver gained $0.232 to $38.95. A revised U.S. Q2 GDP reading of 3.3%—slightly above the initial 3% estimate—had little effect on metals trading.
Friday - 8.22.25: Gold and silver slipped in early U.S. trading Friday, with December gold down $7.90 at $3,466.40 and September silver off $0.205 at $38.99, as traders awaited key inflation data from the July PCE index (expected at 2.6% headline, 2.9% core). Fed Governor Christopher Waller signaled support for a September rate cut and possible further easing over the next six months, citing rising labor market risks. Meanwhile, global markets were mixed, U.S. stocks pointed lower, and geopolitical tensions flared as Brazil moved toward retaliating against U.S. tariffs and China quietly sought to improve ties with India.
The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge—the core PCE index—rose to 2.9% in July, its highest since February, signaling persistent price pressures. Consumer spending and incomes both grew, showing households remain resilient despite higher costs. For the Fed, the challenge remains balancing sticky inflation with rising risks in the labor market.
At the same time, gold is holding above $3,400/oz, showing resilience as investors anticipate lower real rates if the Fed cuts in September.
Sticky inflation keeps the Fed under pressure, but weak labor data could still drive cuts. For investors, this mix favors gold’s upside: inflation paired with expected easing reduces real yields, strengthening bullion even as the dollar faces headwinds.
Core inflation remains above target, but markets are betting on Fed easing in September. That path may unsettle bonds and equities—but for gold, holding firm above $3,400, the setup looks constructive as policy shifts toward lower rates.
Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell signaled at Jackson Hole that a rate cut is likely in September, citing rising risks to employment even as inflation pressures remain visible. The Fed is walking a tightrope: tariffs are pushing prices higher, while labor markets are showing cracks. The outcome will directly affect gold and the U.S. dollar—lower rates weaken the greenback and boost bullion.
Lower interest rates generally weaken the dollar and strengthen gold. A “one-and-done” September cut could stabilize markets temporarily, but sustained easing would deepen the dollar’s decline, making gold cheaper for foreign buyers and driving prices higher. The Fed’s internal split underscores how fragile the balance between fighting inflation and supporting jobs has become. Political pressure is also looming large: Powell’s term expires in May, and President Trump is expected to push hard for cuts to keep equity markets propped up, just as he did in his previous term.
With inflation sticky and labor markets wobbling, the Fed is preparing to cut rates in September. That shift would likely weaken the dollar and lift gold. Beyond the immediate move, politics may play a decisive role: Trump is poised to install a Fed chair aligned with his agenda, ensuring low rates remain the norm. For investors, the setup favors gold’s upside as dollar headwinds build.
Trump isn’t just regulating crypto—he’s turning stablecoins into a weapon to sideline the Federal Reserve and prepare a Treasury-backed digital dollar. With Congress passing the GENIUS Act, stablecoins now have a federal framework, cementing U.S. dollar dominance in digital form. At the center is World Liberty Financial, co-founded by the Trump family, which could become the backbone of this new monetary order.
Trump’s financial strategy is unfolding on multiple fronts:
This isn’t decentralization—it’s centralization under Trump’s orbit. If successful, stablecoins could replace Fed-issued notes with a U.S. Treasury dollar controlled through private channels. That means every global transaction could route through rails owned by World Liberty Financial, sidelining the Fed and reshaping global finance. Critics like Rep. Maxine Waters warn of a “dangerous precedent” where a president profits directly from monetary policy.
Trump’s stablecoin gambit looks less like regulation and more like a hostile takeover of the monetary system. By empowering WLF and pushing a Fed-free dollar, he’s setting the stage for a parallel financial order. For investors and citizens alike, the implications are staggering: a world where money itself is privatized, politicized, and controlled by those who built the rails.
Corporate bankruptcies in the U.S. surged in July to their highest monthly tally since the pandemic, raising concerns about the underlying health of the economy. High interest rates, tariffs, inflation, and a fragile labor market are all contributing to financial stress, putting 2025 on track to exceed last year’s total filings.
While some experts caution that inflation and corporate structuring inflate the headline numbers, the rise in bankruptcies underscores the strain of higher rates and tariffs on U.S. businesses. Economists warn that restrictive trade and immigration policies are squeezing profits and household purchasing power. Still, corporate resilience remains visible: S&P 500 companies posted 11% EPS growth in Q2, well above expectations.
Bankruptcies are rising fast, signaling economic stress even as corporate earnings show surprising strength. With markets eyeing the Fed’s September meeting—where an 81% chance of a 25 bps cut is priced in—the path forward hinges on whether rate relief can ease pressures before defaults accelerate further.
Economic Calendar: September 1 – September 5, 2025
Monday, Sept. 1
Markets closed – Labor Day holiday
Tuesday, Sept. 2
Wednesday, Sept. 3
Thursday, Sept. 4
Friday, Sept. 5
Markets Closed – Labor Day (Mon, Sept. 1)
S&P Final U.S. Manufacturing PMI (Tue, Sept. 2)
ISM Manufacturing (Tue, Sept. 2)
Fed Speeches – Musalem (Wed, Sept. 3), Kashkari (Wed, Sept. 3), Williams (Thu, Sept. 4), Goolsbee (Thu, Sept. 4)
JOLTS Job Openings (Wed, Sept. 3)
ADP Employment (Thu, Sept. 4)
Initial Jobless Claims (Thu, Sept. 4)
S&P Final U.S. Services PMI (Thu, Sept. 4)
ISM Services (Thu, Sept. 4)
Senate Banking Nomination Hearing (Thu, Sept. 4)
U.S. Jobs Report (Fri, Sept. 5)
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