Abstract:Update: Gold (XAU/USD) takes offers to refresh intraday low around $1,799, down 0.10% on a day. In doing so, the bright metal snaps a two-day rebound amid a sluggish Asian session on Wednesday.

Gold holds in a corrective territory on the daily chart as markets remain in anticipation of NFP.
The US dollar has been pressured to start the week by a chorus of less hawkish Fed remarks.
Market sentiment dwindles as traders await the early signal to Fridays US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP), namely the US ADP Employment Change for January, expected 207K versus 807K prior.
Also confusing to the market players, as well as weighing on the gold prices are mixed comments from the US Federal Reserve (Fed) officials and the recently firmer US data, as well as the US Senate‘s procedural voting on China Competition Bill. On the contrary, receding fears of Russia’s immediate invasion of Ukraine join the markets optimism to overcome the Omicron-linked supply crunch fears.
Moving on, the preliminary reading of the Eurozone Consumer Price Index (CPI) for January, expected 4.4% YoY versus 5.5% prior, will also be important to watch ahead of Thursdays European Central Bank (ECB) meeting, not to forget US ADP data.
End of update.
At $1,800, gold, XAU/USD, is consolidating within a bullish correction on the daily chart after hitting a 38.% Fibonacci retracement level in Tuesday's trading. The yellow metal has benefitted from a switch in risk appetite and less hawkish rhetoric from a chorus of Federal reserve speakers since the Fed's governors uber hawkish tone.
Several US Federal Reserve officials are playing down the prospects of aggressive rate hikes coming imminently. For instance, although St. Louis Fed president Bullard (hawkish, voter) said that market pricing of 5 rate hikes this year is not a bad bet, he also said that a 50bp move probably is not helpful.
Over the weekend, Raphael Bostic reiterated that he is sticking to his prediction that three 25 bp hikes this year is the most likely outcome whilst warning that “Every option is on the table for every meeting.” Philadelphia Fed President Patrick Harker was equally cautious and he pushed back on a rate increase of half a percentage point in March, saying he would need to be convinced it was needed. Consequently, the dollar index eased to 96.235 (DXY) and off its recent 19-month high of 97.441.
Looking ahead, there will be a focus on the US jobs market in Nonfarm Payrolls. ''The recovery in employment was probably temporarily interrupted by the Omicron-led surge in COVID cases,'' analysts at TD Securities said.
''Many of the employees who had to isolate likely continued to be paid, and thus remained on payrolls, but many were likely not paid. The report will probably show continued strength in wage gains. The report will include the annual revision to the data.''
However, if there is a weak jobs print owing to the virus, it is unlikely to sway the Fed from its decisively hawkish tone. Traders could decide to look past recent weakness as being related to Omicron's fallout, analysts at TD Securities argued in a note on Tuesday.
''In this context, the data doesn't help to inform global macro participants on whether we are facing a new regime at the Fed, or whether they are jawboning to tame inflation expectations. We expect that the precious metals complex will struggle to attract capital in this context.''
''Given that Chinese demand overwhelmingly supported gold in recent weeks, a seasonal lull following Lunar New Year could mark the end of supportive Chinese demand, suggesting prices are vulnerable to a deeper consolidation in support of our tactical short gold position.
Gold daily chart
In a prior analysis, it was stated that ''considering the trendline support and the daily M-formation, the technicians would argue that a significant correction of the bearish impulse could be in play''...
