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Gold’s Hidden Demand From China Hits 317 Tonnes as ADP Miss Fuels Rally, but Fed’s Hawkish Shadow Lingers

On the surface, the gold market looks bruised. The spot price has clawed back to $4,091.60 after a volatile session, a gain of 1.74% on the day, but the metal remains 9.38% lower over the past month and more than a quarter below the January record of $5,626.80. Beneath the calm, however, a massive buying operation is underway — one the official data barely registers.

Central banks reported net sales of 129 tonnes of gold in the first quarter of 2026, with Turkey emerging as a major seller. Yet the World Gold Council, tracking alternative trade flows, estimates that true global demand reached 244 tonnes over the same period. The driver? China. The country’s net imports surged to 317 tonnes in Q1 — nearly triple the previous quarter’s level. The People’s Bank of China also accelerated its official purchases, buying eight tonnes in April after months of near-stagnation. This clandestine appetite stands in stark contrast to the metal’s public price performance.

Tuesday’s ADP employment report jolted the market out of its torpor. The U.S. private sector added only 98,000 jobs in June, well below the consensus range of 105,000–113,000 and down from a revised 122,000 in May. “The hospitality sector has been underperforming for six straight months,” said Nela Richardson, ADP’s chief economist, while noting that finance and IT continue to hire. The weak print immediately dragged down Treasury yields and the dollar, providing a tailwind for non-yielding gold. The ISM manufacturing index added to the gloom, falling to 53.3 against an expected 54.0, while its price index cratered from 82.1 to 73 — a clear sign that industrial inflation pressures are fading.

Gold’s bounce above $4,000 came just hours after the European Central Bank’s Sintra forum, where Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh announced a sharp shift in communication strategy. The Fed will abandon forward guidance, with future rate decisions made behind closed doors based on real-time data. Warsh acknowledged that inflation risks are ebbing but reaffirmed the 2% target. Markets are now pricing in a 67% probability of a rate hike in September, up from the 60% figure seen earlier. The Fed’s new opacity is unsettling traders already grappling with mixed economic signals.

Technically, the metal remains in a precarious position. The relative strength index stands at 39.4, and the price is nearly 8% below its 50-day moving average. That moving average, around $4,730, serves as formidable resistance; the 200-day line offers support. A drop below $4,000 could open the door to $3,901.30, the 52-week low, while further weakness might push gold toward $3,800, technical analysts warn.

On the bullish side, J.P. Morgan sees a massive rally ahead, forecasting $6,000 by year-end 2026 and $6,300 in 2027. The Deutsche Bank is more circumspect, slashing its third-quarter target to $4,300. The World Gold Council projects an average price of roughly $4,100 in the second half of the year, with a 5% range of fluctuation. The short-term picture is a tug-of-war, with Chinese buying and easing inflation worries on one side and a hawkish Fed and lingering dollar strength on the other.

All eyes now turn to Friday’s official U.S. jobs report. A weaker-than-expected release could solidify the recovery above $4,000; a stronger print would likely reignite fears of persistent core inflation at 4.2% and pave the way toward the $3,800 zone. For now, gold’s real story is being written not in price charts but in the vaults of Beijing.

Beyond the Price Slide: XRP’s Validators and Regulators Are Reshaping the Network’s Institutional Role

The XRP ecosystem is undergoing a quiet transformation that has little to do with its languishing price. While the token hovers just above a yearly low at $1.05, two parallel processes are unfolding that could fundamentally alter the network’s utility: a governance vote on a native lending protocol and a series of regulatory breakthroughs across key markets.

Validators Weight the Lending Infrastructure

On June 30, CoinLaw reported that the XRP Ledger’s validators are now voting on two proposed standards — XLS-65 (Single Asset Vault) and XLS-66 (Lending Protocol). These standards, already available for testing on the devnet, aim to embed a full-fledged credit infrastructure directly into the blockchain’s protocol layer. To pass, each proposal needs the approval of more than 80 percent of trusted validators over an uninterrupted two-week period.

Ripple’s design separates credit decisioning from execution. Underwriting, legal documentation and risk assessment remain external. The ledger handles what happens after a loan is agreed: pooling liquidity into Single Asset Vaults and then converting that liquidity into fixed-term loans with standardized repayment rules, interest calculations and servicing mechanics. The company explicitly positions this against existing on-chain lending platforms such as Aave, Compound, Maple and Clearpool, arguing that institutional lenders need more reliable execution standards than application-level governance can provide.

First-loss capital structures are built into the protocol, allowing pool operators to absorb initial losses from subordinate positions. The intended use cases include short-term liquidity for payment service providers, market-maker inventory financing and deployment of idle digital assets. Importantly, the proposal does not turn XRP into a staking asset — the token is just one of several assets that could flow into the vaults.

Europe’s MiCA Deadline Comes with a Ripple Edge

The same week the validator vote opened, the European Union’s MiCA transition period expired on July 1, 2026. Crypto-service providers now require a full CASP (Crypto-Asset Service Provider) license to operate across the bloc. Ripple preempted the deadline by securing a provisional CASP authorization from Luxembourg’s CSSF on June 23, supplementing an e-money license obtained in February. That combination allows Ripple to offer its RLUSD stablecoin and other services across all 30 countries of the European Economic Area with a single integration.

The achievement is notable: of more than 1,200 firms that held national legacy licenses, fewer than 250 have managed to obtain the full CASP authorization. Ripple is among that small cohort.

U.S. Policy Moves on Two Fronts

Across the Atlantic, California’s new Digital Financial Assets Law took effect on July 1, requiring digital asset providers to hold a license or have an active application on file. Penalties for non-compliance reach $100,000 per day. Meanwhile, the CLARITY Act — legislation that would formally classify XRP as a digital commodity — cleared the Senate Banking Committee on May 14 and was placed on the Senate calendar in early June. A floor vote is expected in late July or early August. If the Senate recesses for the summer without acting, the bill would slip into 2027.

Whales Accumulate as Retail Leverage Drains

Despite the fundamental progress, XRP’s price has fallen nearly 19 percent over the past 30 days and stands more than 50 percent below its level a year ago. The token’s relative strength index sits at 33.6, deep in oversold territory, and the price is roughly 30 percent below its 200-day moving average of $1.49. The all-time high of $3.65, set in July 2025, is now almost three-quarters away.

Yet large wallet holders — so-called whales — have added approximately 1.53 billion tokens to their positions over the past six months, pushing their collective share of the circulating supply to about 74 percent. At the same time, open interest has fallen to a yearly low, suggesting that leveraged short positions are unwinding and selling pressure from derivatives is easing.

Institutional interest continues via a different channel. Spot-based XRP ETFs recorded net inflows of $59.4 million in June, marking the third consecutive month of positive flows.

A Partnership with Major Backing

Ripple has also positioned itself as a day-one integration partner for Open USD, a stablecoin project backed by BlackRock, Visa, Mastercard and Coinbase. The initiative is scheduled to launch later this year, adding another potential use case for Ripple’s settlement infrastructure.

The Escrow Routine Continues

On July 1, the monthly escrow release proceeded as usual: 1 billion XRP were unlocked in three tranches of 200 million, 300 million and 500 million tokens. The release is part of Ripple’s routine supply management and has been in place for years.

The Real Market Question

The technical picture offers a tentative floor. XRP is currently defending the support zone between $0.90 and $1.00, a level from which bounces have occurred in the past. Resistance sits near $1.13. Historically, July has been the token’s strongest month, with an average gain of 9.53 percent across all recorded years.

But the more consequential metric for the network’s future is not the daily price candle — it is the validator vote tally. If enough validators sustain approval above 80 percent for two consecutive weeks, the XRP Ledger will gain a native borrowing and lending capability that institutional players have long demanded. If the threshold is not met, the lending protocol remains what it is today: tested on devnet, but not live on mainnet.

Gold Holds $4,000 as Weak Jobs Data and Fed’s New Silence Create a Crosscurrent

A surprisingly soft US labor market reading and a carefully scripted debut by Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh on the global stage combined Wednesday to jolt gold out of its recent torpor. The precious metal surged as much as 2% intraday, brushing $4,097 an ounce, before settling at $4,091.60 — a 1.74% daily gain that kept it comfortably above the psychologically important $4,000 threshold.

The trigger came from payroll processor ADP, which reported that the private sector added just 98,000 jobs in June. Economists had been forecasting a range of 105,000 to 113,000, following a downwardly revised 122,000 in May. ADP chief economist Nela Richardson noted that while finance and tech firms continue hiring, the hospitality sector has now weakened for six straight months. Bond yields and the dollar dropped almost immediately on the news, giving gold the tailwind it often needs as a non-yielding asset.

Adding to the economic picture, the ISM manufacturing index slipped to 53.3, below the consensus estimate of 54.0. More tellingly, the index’s prices-paid component tumbled from 82.1 to 73, a sharp decline that points to easing inflation pressure in the industrial sector.

Warsh’s Sintra Speech Adds Another Layer of Uncertainty

While the ADP numbers were the day’s spark, gold traders also had to digest Warsh’s first major international address at the European Central Bank’s forum in Sintra, Portugal. The Fed chief, who took office in May, used the occasion to outline a fundamental shift in how the central bank will communicate policy. Forward guidance, he indicated, is out; decisions will be made behind closed doors based on real-time data.

Warsh acknowledged that inflation expectations have eased during his first four weeks in office and that inflation risks have moderated recently. But he rejected any notion of a higher tolerance for above-target price increases. “Anyone hoping for a Fed that is comfortable with inflation above 2% will be disappointed,” he signalled. Asked about the direction of rates at the next meeting — roughly four weeks away — he offered only a cryptic teaser: “When we get into that room and shut the door we’re going to have a good debate.”

Fed Funds Futures currently price in a 67% probability of a rate hike in September. The new opacity from the central bank leaves markets guessing, a climate that often forces gold to swing on every macro data point.

Technical Damage Remains Despite the Rebound

For all of Wednesday’s fireworks, gold’s chart still bears the scars of a brutal month. The metal is up 1.24% over the past seven days, but over the calendar month it has fallen 9.43% — and since the start of the year it is down 5.76%. On a trailing 30-day basis the decline is 9.38%. The record high of $5,626.80 set in late January now sits 27.28% above current prices, while the 52-week low of $3,901.30 from October 2025 is just 4.88% below.

Technical indicators underscore the bearish undertow. The 50-day moving average stands at $4,438.04 and the 100-day average at $4,664.78, both well above the spot price. The relative strength index reads 39.4, suggesting mild selling pressure without entering oversold territory. Annualized 30-day volatility has climbed to 26.78%, reflecting elevated market jitters.

The recent price action follows a decisive break below $4,000 in late June. Gold first dipped under that level on June 24 and 25, pressured by a resurgent dollar and the expectation of higher interest rates. Then on June 17, the Fed’s own rate decision pushed the closing price to $3,999, the first finish below $4,000 since November 2025.

Divergent Forecasts for the Summer

Looking ahead, the precious metal faces a tug-of-war between competing forces. The US dollar index remains above 101, supported by geopolitical tensions surrounding Iran and the Fed’s hawkish undertone — normally headwinds for gold. Yet the weakening labor market and the collapse in the ISM price index suggest that the inflation narrative may be shifting.

Forecasters are split. Deutsche Bank has trimmed its third-quarter target to $4,300 an ounce. The World Gold Council, in its base case, sees gold averaging roughly $4,100 in the second half of the year, with a 5% fluctuation band. Technical analysts, however, warn that if Friday’s official nonfarm payrolls report surprises to the upside, gold could slide back toward $3,800.

For now, gold is clinging to its $4,000 lifeline. The next catalyst — be it a weak official jobs print or another round of Fed rhetoric — will determine whether the metal can build on Wednesday’s bounce or resume its descent.

Silver’s Paradox: Deficit Narrows Yet Price Crashes to 7-Month Low

Silver is weathering a storm that its own supply deficit cannot calm. The metal traded below $58 an ounce on Wednesday, its weakest in seven months, despite notching a sixth consecutive year of structural shortage. The gap, initially estimated at 67 million ounces, has since shrunk to 46.3 million, but that shrinking cushion has offered no protection against a brutal sell-off.

The immediate trigger is a Federal Reserve that refuses to blink. A fresh JOLTS report showed US job openings at a two-year high, and analysts expect June wages to accelerate. Core inflation remains stubbornly above the central bank’s 2% target, reinforcing bets on at least one more rate hike this year — possibly as soon as September. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has amplified the hawkish tone by advocating a reduction in the balance sheet, reversing earlier expectations for late 2025. Higher real yields and a climbing greenback are punishing any asset that doesn’t pay interest, and silver is squarely in the crosshairs.

Compounding the macro headwind is a marked slowdown in industrial demand, the metal’s bedrock. The solar photovoltaic sector, a voracious consumer, could see its purchases drop by 19% as manufacturers economise or switch to substitutes. Jewellery buyers are also retreating, with a 16% decline expected. Overall industrial consumption is forecast to slip 3% to 640 million ounces. High-tech areas such as electronics and medical devices continue to use silver, but they cannot offset the broader retreat.

Geopolitical tension has added another layer of uncertainty. Markets had clung to hopes that US-Iran talks in Qatar could yield a ceasefire in the Middle East, but Tehran poured cold water on those expectations, denying the reports of diplomatic meetings in Doha and refusing direct talks with American officials. The lack of progress rattled Asian trading desks, and in India the spot price fell 50 rupees, sliding back below the 2,400-rupee psychological threshold as traders booked profits from a brief bounce.

The macro backdrop is darkening on a global scale. The World Bank projects world economic growth of just 2.5% in 2026 in its base scenario, with a gloomier path that could knock the figure to 1.3%. A weaker economy would further sap industrial appetite for silver. Unlike gold, which enjoys steady central-bank buying during dips, silver must rely on fresh investment capital to recover. Without that inflow, the deficit — even if it narrows — remains an academic point.

Attention now turns to the upcoming US nonfarm payrolls report and further speeches by Warsh. A robust labour reading would likely send the white metal spiralling towards fresh lows for the year, confirming that in the current environment, a supply shortfall alone is no match for rate anxiety and cooling industry demand.

Gold’s $4,000 Tug-of-War: Central Banks Pile Up Record Tonnes as Fed Hawks Force Steepest Quarterly Drop

Gold is caught in a violent crosscurrent. Central banks just snapped up a record 1,231 tonnes in the first quarter — the highest Q1 haul on record — yet the metal has shed 10% over the past month and briefly pierced $4,000 an ounce, touching a low of $3,984 on July 1 that marks its weakest level in nearly eight months.

The explanation lies in the divergent forces driving the market. Institutional buyers from Beijing to global monetary authorities are stockpiling bullion at an unprecedented clip. China alone added 8 tonnes in April, extending its buying streak to 18 consecutive months, and net imports surged to 317 tonnes in the first quarter — nearly triple the prior quarter’s figure. Worldwide, official sector purchases reached 244 tonnes in Q1, up from 208 tonnes in the previous three months.

But these massive flows are being swamped by a macroeconomic headwind: the Federal Reserve’s hawkish pivot. Strong US economic data have crushed hopes of rate cuts in 2026. The JOLTS report on June 30 showed a steady 7.6 million job openings in May, while core inflation remains stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% target. Markets now price a 30% chance of a rate hike at the next FOMC meeting and a probability above 60% for September, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Rising bond yields are making interest-bearing assets more attractive, draining the shine from gold.

The Fed’s new leadership is amplifying the uncertainty. Chairman Kevin Warsh, installed in June, created five independent task forces to rethink the central bank’s communication strategy, balance sheet management, data governance, inflation framework, and labor market assessment. The Fed currently holds $6.7 trillion in bonds, and any overhaul of its balance-sheet normalization is likely to ripple through markets. The June dot plot reinforced the hawkish tilt: nine of 18 participants expect a rate increase this year, and the median forecast for end-2026 edged up to 3.8%. Nearly all officials see rates holding steady or rising through 2026.

Analysts are scrambling to lower their sights. Citi slashed its short-term target from $4,300 to $4,000, citing a strong dollar and waning physical demand. Deutsche Bank trimmed its current-quarter forecast to $4,300 and also cut its year-end projection. Goldman Sachs, meanwhile, reduced its year-end 2026 target from $5,400 to $4,900, explicitly citing the absence of Fed easing. Technically, J.P. Morgan notes that gold is drifting above its 200-day moving average near $4,340 but capped below the 50-day at $4,730 — a textbook sign of a market under pressure.

Geopolitical developments add another layer of bearish risk. US-Iran talks are under way in Qatar, with no direct negotiations expected. Any tangible progress could further deflate the risk premium that has supported gold since the Middle East crisis erupted in late February. That crisis, combined with surging energy prices, first triggered the selling wave that has now accelerated into a full-blown rout.

The immediate trigger for the latest leg lower came from the labor market. The upcoming Nonfarm Payrolls report, released on Thursday this week due to the Independence Day holiday, will be the next flashpoint. Estimates vary — one survey of economists points to 115,000 new jobs, another to 110,000 — but the consensus is clear: a strong print would seal expectations for a rate hike and likely push gold decisively below $4,000. The unemployment rate is expected to hold at 4.3%.

Compounding the selling pressure is a structural shift in market expectations. Futures markets are now pricing in at least one rate increase for this year, a dramatic reversal from the easing bets that had supported gold earlier. The ADP employment report and the ISM manufacturing index, both due in the coming days, will provide further clues. For now, gold remains trapped between record central bank demand and the most aggressive monetary tightening narrative in months — a tension that shows no sign of resolution.