Gold bulls eye fresh highs as oil rout rewires Fed rate expectations

Gold bulls eye fresh highs as oil rout rewires Fed rate expectations
Devesh Kumar
17 Jun 2026, 08:57 AM

powered by

Invezz
Spot Gold (XAU/USD)

Buy spot gold. Oil’s rout is easing inflation fears and pushing rate-hike odds down, which supports gold’s “no yield” profile. The market is also waiting on Fed chair Kevin Warsh’s tone—if he’s even slightly less hawkish than priced, gold can extend toward fresh highs. Central-bank buying and Asian demand provide a durable floor if the Fed message is mixed.

Key Risk: Warsh signals a clear hawkish fight against inflation and rate-hike odds snap back higher, lifting real yields and capping gold fast.

Silver (XAG/USD)

Buy silver as a higher-beta expression of the same macro impulse. If oil stays weak and the Fed tone doesn’t turn sharply hawkish, silver typically benefits more than gold from improving rate expectations and risk appetite, while still getting support from the broader precious-metals bid.

Key Risk: A sharp risk-off move or industrial-demand shock hits silver harder than gold, overwhelming the rate-support narrative.

  • Gold rises as oil slide cools Fed rate-hike fears for global markets.
  • Warsh Fed debut takes focus as traders trim December hike bets.
  • Asian demand and central bank buying keep gold supported, analysts argue.

Gold extended its advance on Wednesday as falling oil prices and hopes of a US-Iran peace agreement softened one of the market’s biggest inflation worries before the Federal Reserve’s policy decision.

Spot bullion rose for a fifth straight session, trading near a one-week high, as investors weighed the prospect of Iranian oil returning to global markets against uncertainty over the agreement’s final terms.

The move was measured rather than euphoric.

Traders still have to hear from Kevin Warsh at his first meeting as Fed chair, where the tone on inflation and future rate risks may decide whether gold’s rebound has further room to run.

Oil relief changes the rate debate

The latest support for bullion came less from fear and more from the rates market.

A possible US-Iran deal, including sanctions relief that would allow Tehran to sell oil once the agreement is signed, has dragged crude prices towards three-month lows.

That matters for gold because lower energy costs can ease inflation pressure and reduce the need for tighter monetary policy.

Analysts said the pullback in oil prices has eased some upward pressure on interest rates and tempered rate-hike expectations, although the market rally appears to be losing momentum as investors shift focus to the Fed’s announcement.

Spot gold was up 0.3% at $4,341.12 an ounce by 0230 GMT, while August futures gained 0.2% to $4,361.10.

Warsh’s first Fed test dominates trading

The Fed is widely expected to leave rates unchanged, but the message may matter more than the decision.

Warsh inherits a difficult mix: inflation still above target, political pressure for easier policy, and markets that have recently priced in a meaningful chance of another rate increase.

Traders now see a 59% probability of a December rate hike, down from about 70% last week, according to CME FedWatch.

That shift has helped gold, which tends to struggle when borrowing costs rise because it offers no yield.

As per experts, the investors are still unsure how Warsh would balance his hawkish reputation with pressure from a White House seeking a more dovish pivot.

A firm warning on inflation could cap gold’s gains, while a patient tone may keep buyers engaged.

Central banks keep a floor under demand

Beyond the short-term Fed trade, bullion continues to draw support from official-sector demand.

Westpac analysts noted that longer-term support should persist, helped by Asian demand and central bank buying as a hedge against geopolitical and policy risks.

That view was echoed by the World Gold Council, whose latest survey showed a record 45% of reserve managers expect to increase their own gold holdings over the next year.

Other precious metals also moved higher. Silver rose 0.3% to $70.38 an ounce, platinum gained 0.5% to $1,812.80, and palladium added 0.3% to $1,355.65.