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Gold price struggling around $4,500 as U.S. JOLTS shows rise in job openings
The gold market is struggling to hold key near-term support at $4,500 an ounce as the U.S. labor market remains fairly resilient, with the number of available jobs rising more than expected in April. April job openings—a measure of labor demand—rose to 7.62 million, up from March’s reading of 6.89 million, according to the Labor Department’s monthly Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS). Economists had expected a relatively unchanged reading of 6.87 million, according to consensus estimates. The number of available jobs increased by roughly half a million compared to April 2025. “In April, the ... (full story)
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The number of job openings increased to 7.6 million in April, the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics reported today. Over the month, hires and total separations decreased to 5.1 million and 5.0 million, respectively. Within separations, both quits (3.0 million) and layoffs and discharges (1.7 million) were little changed. This release includes estimates of the ...
From finance.yahoo.com | Jun 2, 2026
Bullion trimmed Tuesdays earlier advances of as much as 1.3% after the Bureau of Labor Statistics released data showing that US job openings jumped in April to the highest level in almost two years while layoffs fell. That added to signs of labor-market resilience. Traders also weighed fresh signals from the US and Iran for clues on the prospects of a ...
Mehr News, citing a source, reports that Iran is still reviewing the final text in Tehran and has not yet submitted a response to the U.S.
Iran reportedly still discussing final text of agreement, no response sent to US yet The report cites a source familiar with the situation, in saying that Iran's final text of the deal is still being discussed in Tehran at this juncture. Adding that there is no response yet that is sent to the US on that. There has been so much back and forth on the text/terms of the deal that it is easy to lose track of what is happening. However, the bottom line is that there is still some differences that require sorting out. And that has been the case for well over two weeks already. A reminder on what needs to be agreed between the two sides so that the deal can be signed off: And even then, all this does is to allow for nuclear discussions to take place next. In that lieu, the US is also demanding that Iran provide some baseline promises on nuclear/uranium. The language of it all will be tricky but I wouldn't expect Iran to abide to any "promises" no matter what.