investingLive Asia-Pacific FX news wrap: People's Bank of China buys more gold

  • Financial market news for Asian trading on Tuesday, October 7, 2025
Gold hourly candles wrap 07 October 2025 2

Fed official Jeff Schmid said U.S. monetary policy remains slightly restrictive, with inflation still too high and price increases becoming more widespread, even as the labour market cools but remains healthy. Schmid emphasised the need to maintain inflation credibility while balancing policy goals, warning that boosting demand too aggressively could fuel renewed price pressures. He added that recent tariffs are likely to have only a muted inflation impact.

In New Zealand, the QSBO showed business confidence fell in the third quarter, signalling a risk of another technical recession and deeper interest rate cuts from the RBNZ. The Reserve Bank of New Zealand meet tomorrow, NZ time. A 25bp interst rate cut is widely expected.

In Australia, consumer confidence slid to a six-month low on renewed doubts over the timing of future rate cuts following stubborn inflation data. Meanwhile, ANZ-Indeed job ads fell 3.3% in September, extending their downtrend.

Gold traded just shy of US$4,000 per ounce as the U.S. government shutdown entered its second week, while political turmoil in France and Japan added to safe-haven demand. The PBOC said its gold reserves edged higher to 74.06mn fine troy ounces at end-September from 74.02mn in August. Goldman Sachs raised its end-2026 gold forecast to US$4,600/oz from US$4,300, citing sustained central-bank demand.

Despite the geopolitical backdrop, major FX pairs traded within subdued ranges, with volatility staying contained across USD, EUR, JPY, and AUD.

Asia-Pac stocks:

  • Japan (Nikkei 225) +0.67%
  • Hong Kong (Hang Seng) -0.67%
  • Shanghai Composite Closed for Golden Week holidays
  • Australia (S&P/ASX 200) -0.25%

Top Brokers

Sponsored

General Risk Warning