Invezz

Gold bulls face $4,000 test as Fed repricing cuts through Iran risk

Gold bulls face $4,000 test as Fed repricing cuts through Iran risk
Devesh Kumar
Jun 24, 2026, 01:09 AM

powered by

Invezz
Gold (XAU/USD)

Sell XAU/USD (or short gold futures) into the Fed repricing. The article flags a stronger dollar and higher yields as the dominant driver, with gold already slipping and the next catalyst (PCE) likely to reinforce higher-for-longer if hot. Technical focus: $4,000 is the “test”; if it breaks, momentum likely accelerates toward ~$3,800.

Key Risk: PCE comes in cooler and the dollar/yields roll over, triggering a renewed safe-haven bid that snaps gold back above $4,000.

iShares Silver Trust (SLV)

Sell SLV as a high-beta expression of the same macro pressure. The article notes silver, platinum, and palladium are falling too, meaning the move is broad, not just a gold-specific dip. Silver typically amplifies rate/dollar moves, so downside can be faster if $4,000 breaks and the dollar rally extends.

Key Risk: Geopolitical headlines reprice risk higher (Iran escalation) and silver catches a fresh safe-haven surge that outperforms gold.

  • Gold slips to two-week low as stronger dollar hits bullion demand.
  • Fed rate-hike bets pressure gold as traders await US PCE data this week.
  • US-Iran peace doubts keep haven demand alive as bullion retreats further.

Gold’s latest retreat is less about fading fear and more about a market that has changed the question.

The metal is still drawing support from an uncertain US-Iran peace process, but that has not been enough to offset a stronger dollar and a sharp repricing of Federal Reserve policy risk.

Spot gold fell 1% to $4,067.51 an ounce in early Asian trade on Wednesday, after touching its weakest level since June 11.

August futures dropped 1.6% to $4,083.90. Silver, platinum and palladium also moved lower, showing that the pressure was spread across the precious-metals complex rather than confined to bullion.

Dollar strength squeezes bullion

The dollar climbed to a more than one-year high as traders increased bets that the Fed may need to lift rates again this year.

That matters for gold because the metal pays no income.

When yields rise and the dollar strengthens, the opportunity cost of holding bullion becomes harder to ignore.

The move also makes gold more expensive for buyers using other currencies, which can cool physical and investment demand.

A macro analyst said the latest pressure reflected a shift from war-driven inflation fear into a rates story: bonds weakened, yields moved higher, the dollar advanced and gold lost ground.

Iran uncertainty keeps a floor under risk

Geopolitics has not disappeared from the trade. President Donald Trump said Iran had accepted open-ended nuclear inspections, while Tehran denied making such a concession.

The two sides also appeared to differ over access to frozen overseas funds.

That leaves the peace deal looking fragile, even if markets have started to remove some of the war premium that had supported bullion earlier in the year.

Gold is down about 23% since the US-Israel conflict with Iran began in late February.

The decline suggests investors are now more worried about sticky inflation and policy tightening than immediate safe-haven demand.

PCE data becomes the next test

The next important trigger is Thursday’s US personal consumption expenditures report, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge.

A stronger reading would reinforce expectations of higher rates and could push gold toward the psychologically important $4,000 level.

Analysts see that area as a key technical line. If it gives way, attention may shift towards $3,800, with a deeper correction possible if the dollar rally extends.

For now, bullion remains caught between two forces: geopolitical unease that limits the downside, and a hawkish Fed repricing that keeps rallies under pressure.