Gold pushes higher as dollar and oil surge, but key resistance looms

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By Gary Wagner and Joseph Wagner
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Gold pushes higher as dollar and oil surge, but key resistance looms teaser image

Gold futures closed Monday at $4,540 per ounce, adding $50 — or 1.14% — on the session, capping a strong five-day run that has seen prices appreciate by 2.84%, or roughly $125, since last Tuesday. The advance marks the metal's highest closing level since it slipped beneath its 100-day simple moving average (SMA) on Friday, March 26th, a breakdown that has since defined the ceiling of every attempted rally.

Both the U.S. Dollar Index and crude oil futures cleared the psychologically significant 100 level during Monday's session, continuing a bullish trajectory that began last Tuesday. The Dollar Index has added 1.45% over five consecutive positive sessions, settling at 100.57 — a reading that ordinarily acts as a headwind for dollar-denominated assets like gold. Yet crude oil's dramatic surge has arguably overshadowed the dollar's move, with front-month futures climbing 18.28% across the same five-session stretch to trade at $102.88 per barrel. That kind of inflationary impulse in energy prices tends to stoke safe-haven and inflation-hedge demand for gold, helping to offset the pressure that a rising dollar typically exerts on the metal.

Despite the week's gains, gold's path forward is far from clear. The 100-day SMA — currently resting at $4,624 — has proven stubborn resistance since the March 26th breakdown, and bulls will need to achieve a convincing close above that level to change the near-term narrative from "recovery" to "resumption of trend."

The stakes are meaningful. Gold's record high, set earlier this year, stands at $5,626 per ounce. At current prices, the metal remains 19.31% below that peak — a substantial gap that underscores just how much work remains before a challenge of all-time highs becomes a realistic conversation. Reclaiming the 100-day SMA would be the first significant step, likely opening the door toward the next cluster of resistance levels and drawing in momentum-driven buyers who have been sidelined since the March pullback.

For now, gold finds itself in an interesting position: buoyed by inflationary forces and a risk-aware macro environment, yet technically constrained. Traders will be watching closely to see whether the current momentum can translate into a sustained break above $4,624. A failure at that level risks a retest of recent lows, while a clean breakout could quickly shift sentiment and bring the record high back into longer-term focus.

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Gary Wagner

Gary S. Wagner has been a technical market analyst for 25 years. A frequent contributor to STOCKS & COMMODITIES Magazine, he has also written for Futures Magazine as well as Barrons. He is the executive producer of "The Gold Forecast," a daily video newsletter.

He has been a speaker for financial seminars including Futures West and the Dow Jones Financial Symposium which travels throughout the world.. Coauthor of "Trading Applications Of Japanese Candlestick Charting" a John Wiley publication.

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Joseph Wagner

Joseph Wagner is a technical analyst with a background in Fibonacci and Japanese Candlesticks. He has primarily focused on Bitcoin for the past 8 years, and authored a publication on trading BTC called “the Bitcoin Minute” since 2020. A member of The Gold Forecast team since 2015 and has been at the head of their silver division since the start of 2025.
Disclaimer: The views expressed in this article are those of the author and may not reflect those of Kitco Metals Inc. The author has made every effort to ensure accuracy of information provided; however, neither Kitco Metals Inc. nor the author can guarantee such accuracy. This article is strictly for informational purposes only. It is not a solicitation to make any exchange in commodities, securities or other financial instruments. Kitco Metals Inc. and the author of this article do not accept culpability for losses and/ or damages arising from the use of this publication.