HomeNewsBusinesscommoditiesCommodities may take a breather as US Government shutdown risks cloud jobs data

Commodities may take a breather as US Government shutdown risks cloud jobs data

Investor attention next week (starting from September 29) will focus on scheduled speeches from several Fed officials, with markets currently pricing in two quarter-point rate cuts in upcoming meetings.

September 28, 2025 / 06:48 IST
Story continues below Advertisement
Commodities Outlook for next week
Commodities Outlook for next week

It was quite an eventful week (ended September 26) for commodities, as supply-side concerns and growing expectations of more Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2025 fuelled an impressive rally across the board.

The US dollar extended its recovery from the lowest levels since March 2022, closing the week above 98 as traders digested mixed signals from Federal Reserve officials. Fed Chair Jerome Powell reiterated the need to balance inflation risks against a slowing labour market, making it clear he would not pre-commit to further rate cuts without sufficient supporting data. In contrast, Fed Governor Michelle Bowman supported more cuts, citing a weakening jobs market, while inflation remained a key concern for other Fed officials, including Raphael Bostic and Austan Goolsbee.

Story continues below Advertisement

All three major US stock indices hit record highs earlier in the week but pulled back as lower-than-expected US jobless claims and an upward revision to Q2 GDP sparked concerns that this may hold the Fed back from cutting rates. Uncertainty over a potential government shutdown also weighed on sentiment. However, losses were trimmed as US markets rebounded on Friday after three consecutive sessions of declines, with the core PCE data coming in line with expectations, which keeps the Fed on track for a potential rate cut at the October meeting.

COMEX Gold prices, too, rebounded sharply on Friday to $3,814 per troy ounce as the dollar weakened following the inflation data. Earlier in the week, gold hit a record high of $3,824, driven by reports that China is positioning itself as a custodian of foreign sovereign gold reserves, NATO’s warnings to Russia over airspace violations, and strong ETF inflows. Silver was the standout performer, surging to a 14-year high of $46.9 per troy ounce, supported by safe- haven demand and China’s pledge to expand wind and solar power capacity to more than six times 2020 levels.