ECB President Lagarde speaks at 2:30pm following this week’s rate decision (if it fell this week) or as a standalone communication. Her comments will be assessed against the backdrop of improving Eurozone industrial production, the ongoing Liberation Day tariff uncertainty for European exporters, and the below-target CPI reading from last week. Any signal of accelerated ECB easing — cutting faster than currently priced — would be EUR-negative and dollar-positive, creating a near-term headwind for gold. A more hawkish tone, citing the tariff inflation risk, would be EUR-positive and gold-supportive.
8:30pm — Australian Employment: Labour Market Health Check
Australian Employment Change is forecast at 19.1K (prior 48.9K) — a significant expected deceleration from last month’s strong reading. Unemployment Rate is forecast to hold at 4.3%. The prior Employment Change of 48.9K was the strongest reading in months — a return to 19.1K would be a normalisation rather than a deterioration, which is broadly neutral for the AUD. A miss below 10K or a rise in unemployment above 4.3% would accelerate RBA cut expectations and weaken the AUD.

9:00pm — China Q1 GDP and Activity Data: The Night’s Defining Moment
The final event of the session — and arguably the most important data release of the week globally — is China’s Q1 GDP at 9:00pm, alongside a comprehensive suite of March activity data. The forecasts: GDP q/q at 4.8% (prior 4.5%), Industrial Production y/y at 5.4% (prior 6.3%), Retail Sales y/y at 2.4% (prior 2.8%), Fixed Asset Investment ytd/y at 1.9% (prior 1.8%), and Unemployment Rate at 5.2% (prior 5.3%).
A GDP reading at 4.8% would beat the prior 4.5% and confirm that China’s economy is growing at its fastest quarterly pace in over a year — a globally significant positive surprise. However, the activity data tells a more nuanced story: Industrial Production expected to slow from 6.3% to 5.4%, and Retail Sales decelerating from 2.8% to 2.4%. The GDP beat is headline-positive, but the activity data suggests the growth is becoming less broad-based.
For gold, China’s GDP is a complex input. Strong Chinese growth supports physical gold demand — China is the world’s largest gold consumer. It also reduces global recession fears, which temporarily reduces safe-haven gold demand. The net effect depends on which factor markets weight more heavily: historically, a China GDP beat that is accompanied by stable industrial activity (copper demand, infrastructure spending) is net positive for gold through the physical demand channel.
A GDP miss — below 4.5% — in the context of Liberation Day tariff pressure on Chinese exports would be the most bearish global growth signal available and would reignite safe-haven gold demand across all channels simultaneously.
AUD/USD: China GDP beat is the most direct AUD catalyst available — Australia’s largest export market growing faster than expected supports commodity demand. A China GDP miss combined with a weak Australian employment print (8:30pm) would be the most bearish AUD combination of the session.
Copper / Industrial metals: China industrial production and fixed asset investment are the primary drivers for base metals demand. A beat on both would be the most bullish copper catalyst of the week.
Key Levels and Full Market Summary
- Gold (XAU/USD): $4,810 · Dip target $4,780 · Resistance $4,839–$4,860 · Target $4,890+ · Floor $4,748 · Beige Book 1:00pm + China GDP 9:00pm are the session anchors
- EUR/USD: Eurozone IP beat positive · Lagarde 2:30pm is the primary EUR catalyst · Import prices at 7:30am shapes USD direction heading into European afternoon
- GBP/USD: Bailey speaks twice — 10:50am and 1:00pm · Hawkish Bailey (tariff inflation) = GBP up · Dovish Bailey (growth risk) = GBP down · Significant volatility expected
- USD/JPY: Import prices at 7:30am sets USD tone · Beige Book at 1:00pm refines the narrative · China GDP at 9:00pm is the risk sentiment driver for the close
- AUD/USD: Employment at 8:30pm + China GDP at 9:00pm = dual catalysts · Beat on both = strong AUD session · Miss on either = pressure resumes
- S&P 500 / Nasdaq: Empire State + Import Prices set morning tone · Beige Book at 1:00pm is the Fed signal · China GDP at 9:00pm drives after-hours direction
- DAX: Eurozone IP beat supports · Lagarde 2:30pm is key for European close · China GDP at 9:00pm influences overnight futures
- Copper: China Industrial Production and Fixed Asset Investment are the primary inputs · Beat = copper surge · Miss = risk-off commodity selloff
- WTI Crude: Oil inventory data at 9:30am · Iran ceasefire holding reduces geopolitical premium · Tariff-driven global growth slowdown is the structural headwind
- Gold structural case: Import prices acceleration + Beige Book tariff pass-through + China GDP physical demand = multiple concurrent tailwinds · $4,890 is today’s target · $5,000 is the April objective
Gold at $4,810 is not resting — it is loading. The dip to $4,780 is the technical reset before the continuation. The Beige Book at 1:00pm provides the Fed’s first systematic tariff reality check. China’s GDP at 9:00pm provides the global growth verdict. Between those two events, Bailey and Lagarde define the currency backdrop. Today’s session writes the setup for the $4,890 target — and potentially the path back toward $5,000 if the data confirms the stagflation narrative that has been gold’s structural bull case since Liberation Day.
Analysis based on the XAU/USD 15-minute chart as of April 15, 2026, 10:21 UTC+3. Economic data sourced from the daily macro calendar. This article is for informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute financial advice.
Written by T. S. Gospodinov
T. S. Gospodinov is an Independent gold market analyst focused on liquidity structures and macro-driven price cycles.
