Gold near $4,505 as traders weigh ceasefire talks and inflation data

Gold near $4,505 as traders weigh ceasefire talks and inflation data
Devesh Kumar
May 27, 2026, 00:25 A.M.

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US real yields (via TIPS)

Buy US real-yield exposure (long 5Y TIPS / short TIPS ETF like SCHP). The key driver in the piece is the Fed path: hotter PCE supports higher real rates, which crushes gold. Positioning in real yields lets you monetize the “rates stay higher” scenario even if gold chops around on headlines.

Key Risk: PCE comes in soft and Fed messaging turns dovish, pushing real yields down and lifting gold.

Gold (XAU/USD, June futures)

Sell gold. The article flags a downward trend with only choppy consolidation, and it highlights that traders won’t chase haven bids without firmer escalation or a diplomatic breakthrough. With PCE and Fed speakers ahead, the setup favors “higher-for-longer” risk if inflation prints hot, which typically pressures non-yielding gold. Target $3,800–$3,700 over the year as the trend thesis implies.

Key Risk: A clear US-Iran escalation that disrupts Strait of Hormuz shipping and drives a sustained safe-haven bid for gold.

  • Gold holds near $4,505 as traders monitor US-Iran tensions.
  • Fed speakers and Thursday’s PCE data in focus for rate outlook.
  • Analyst sees downside risk if gold’s current trend persists.

Gold prices were little changed on Wednesday as traders monitored efforts to broker a ceasefire between the US and Iran and awaited fresh signals from Federal Reserve officials on the outlook for interest rates.

Spot gold was steady at $4,504.95 an ounce as of 0215 GMT. US gold futures for June delivery were also little changed at $4,503.90.

The muted move followed a period of choppy trading, with bullion consolidating as investors looked for clearer direction from geopolitical developments and US monetary policy.

Other precious metals were mixed. Spot silver slipped 0.2% to $76.83 an ounce, while platinum fell 0.9% to $1,941.12. Palladium was little changed at $1,379.44.

US-Iran ceasefire efforts in focus

Geopolitics remained a key driver for the market after Iran accused the US on Tuesday of violating a fragile ceasefire by launching attacks near the Strait of Hormuz.

The waterway is one of the world’s most important shipping routes, and any disruption near the strait can quickly feed into broader concerns about energy flows, inflation and risk appetite.

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio said it could take “a few days” to reach an agreement to halt hostilities, after earlier signs of progress towards an initial deal to end the fighting and restart maritime traffic.

Gold, traditionally seen as a haven asset during periods of political and military uncertainty, has been sensitive to headlines from the region.

However, the latest price action suggested traders were reluctant to chase bullion higher without firmer evidence of a renewed escalation or a diplomatic breakthrough.

Fed speakers and PCE data awaited

Investors are also looking to Federal Reserve policymakers for guidance on how inflation is shaping the path for interest rates.

Comments from Fed Vice Chair Philip Jefferson and Governor Lisa Cook are expected to be closely watched for clues on whether officials remain cautious about easing policy.

The next major economic release is Thursday’s US Personal Consumption Expenditures price index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge.

A hotter reading could support the case for keeping rates higher for longer, while softer data may strengthen expectations for rate cuts.

Higher interest rates tend to weigh on gold because the metal does not offer yield. Lower rate expectations, by contrast, can support demand for bullion.

Analyst sees downside risk

The analysts said that gold appeares to remain in a downward trend, though the market was moving through long periods of consolidation.

The traders were increasingly focused on whether there would be a breakthrough in the US-Iran story, while inflation risks and bond-market moves were also shaping sentiment.

If the current trend persists, Spivak said gold could fall to about $3,700 to $3,800 by the end of the year.

For now, bullion remains caught between competing forces. Geopolitical risks are helping to support haven demand, while uncertainty over the Fed’s next steps is keeping traders cautious ahead of fresh inflation data.