Invezz

Why gold is falling even as US-Iran strikes rattle oil markets

Why gold is falling even as US-Iran strikes rattle oil markets
Devesh Kumar
29 Jun 2026, 08:42 AM

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Long US Real Rates Hedge (TIPS)

Buy US TIPS (e.g., iShares TIPS ETF, TIP) as a hedge against the “oil shock → inflation worry” narrative turning into growth fear. If the conflict escalates enough to slow the economy, inflation expectations can roll over while the Fed stays restrictive, supporting real-rate-sensitive assets like TIPS.

Key Risk: Inflation stays hot and the Fed keeps hiking, pushing real yields up and crushing TIPS prices.

Short Gold (XAU/USD)

Sell XAU/USD (or gold futures). The article’s core driver is not “fear,” it’s “higher oil → stickier inflation → Fed hikes.” Gold yields nothing, and the market is pricing at least one more hike (80% Dec). With gold on track for a 4th monthly decline and the dollar headwind, rallies are likely to be sold.

Key Risk: A clear shift to rate cuts (cooler inflation/jobs) that forces the market to price fewer Fed hikes, letting gold reprice higher as a true safe haven.

  • Gold slips as oil rebound and Fed rate bets keep bullion under pressure.
  • Fresh Gulf strikes revive inflation worries as US-Iran talks restart.
  • Jobs data looms as traders test whether gold can defend $4000 this week.

Gold is once again caught between fear and yield. Fresh US-Iran strikes in the Gulf have pushed oil higher, reviving concern that energy costs could keep inflation sticky.

Yet bullion is not getting much safe-haven help. Instead, traders are focused on what higher crude could mean for the Federal Reserve.

Spot gold fell 0.7% to $4061.35 an ounce in early trade on Monday, while August futures slipped 0.5% to $4076.40.

The metal is now on course for a fourth monthly decline, with losses of more than 10% in June.

Oil shock revives inflation worries

The latest pressure came after renewed military exchanges between Washington and Tehran over the weekend.

Iran launched missiles and drones at US military sites in Kuwait and Bahrain, after fresh American strikes in the Gulf raised doubts over the fragile ceasefire.

Oil rose as traders reassessed the risk around the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway that carries a major share of global crude and LNG shipments.

Brent and WTI had fallen sharply in recent weeks as tanker traffic improved, but the weekend escalation showed how quickly the risk premium can return.

For gold, the oil move is uncomfortable. Higher crude prices can lift inflation expectations, which would normally support bullion.

This time, however, the market is treating energy inflation as a reason for tighter monetary policy.

Fed bets keep bullion under pressure

Traders now expect at least one Fed rate increase this year and see roughly an 80% chance of a December hike, according to CME FedWatch.

That is the main reason gold has struggled to benefit from geopolitical anxiety.

The metal does not pay interest, so it tends to lose appeal when cash and bonds offer higher returns.

A firmer dollar has added another headwind, making dollar-priced bullion more expensive for buyers using other currencies.

Analysts said the market is no longer trading gold purely as a crisis hedge. It is being driven by the interaction between oil, inflation expectations and the Fed’s reaction function.

That makes the next batch of US data critical.

Jobs data becomes the next test

Investors will turn to June ADP employment figures and the nonfarm payrolls report later this week for clues on whether the labour market is still strong enough to tolerate higher rates.

A softer set of numbers could help gold stabilise by cooling the dollar and easing rate expectations.

But a resilient labour market would strengthen the case for further tightening and keep rallies under pressure.

Diplomacy remains another swing factor.

Washington and Tehran have reportedly agreed to halt recent hostilities and restart talks on the Strait of Hormuz, but the weekend strikes showed how fragile that process remains.

Silver fell 1.1% to $58.51 an ounce. Platinum gained 1% to $1630.13, while palladium rose 0.8% to $1218.92.