What Could Fed Minutes Do For Gold Today?

 | Aug 19, 2020 02:38AM ET

In their typical form, the Federal Reserve’s meeting minutes—usually released three weeks after its Federal Open Market Committee sits—articulate what the FOMC did not say in its monthly interest rates announcement. 

The minutes give specifics on the economic concerns expressed inside the room by the different Fed governors (anonymously, of course) and the consensus achieved. The details often reveal an interesting nugget or two of information not relayed during the post-meeting news conference of Fed Chairman Jay Powell.

The highly-charged debate on how the U.S. economy is faring amid the coronavirus pandemic is what makes today’s minutes from the July 28-29 meeting super important to forex, equity and precious metals traders.

The next rate decision isn't until Sept. 16. Between now and then, individual Fed governors will express their thoughts on the economy and specifics such as employment and inflation, but today’s minutes on the July meeting are particularly crucial to a highly-strung gold market. The Fed will release the minutes at 2:00 PM ET (18:00 GMT).

In Tuesday’s trade, gold futures in New York broke above $2,020 an ounce the first time in a week, before the benchmark December gold futures on COMEX settled up $14.40, or 0.7%, at $2,013.10. It was a remarkable turnaround for a market that just a week earlier crashed $92 in a day, falling almost $130 from session highs of $2,040.50 to lows of $1,911.30.