Invezz

Gold loses its $4,000 grip as Fed bets turn haven trade into a trap

Gold loses its $4,000 grip as Fed bets turn haven trade into a trap
Devesh Kumar
25 Jun 2026, 05:50 AM

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Long US Dollar (DXY)

Buy the US dollar via DXY exposure because the article highlights a persistent dollar rally (13-month high) as the main transmission mechanism into gold weakness. If the market keeps pricing 3 Fed hikes and waits for inflation data, the dollar should remain supported versus currencies that fund gold demand.

Key Risk: PCE surprises to the downside and markets price fewer hikes, causing a sharp dollar selloff.

Short Gold (XAU/USD)

Sell XAU/USD (or buy gold futures puts) because the article shows gold is being driven by a firm dollar and rising Fed-hike odds, not by a collapse in geopolitics. With gold paying no income, higher yields and a stronger USD keep pressure on every bounce. The key trigger is the next PCE print: if it reinforces the “more hikes” narrative, gold stays below the $4,000 psychological level and sellers control.

Key Risk: PCE comes in clearly cooler, the dollar rolls over, and Fed-hike odds drop fast—pushing gold back above $4,000 and reversing the macro pressure.

  • Gold stays below $4000 as dollar rally lifts Fed rate fears ahead of PCE.
  • US PCE data is now the key test with gold near seven-month lows into Fed.
  • Silver and platinum slip, while palladium edges higher in cautious trade.

Gold’s break below $4,000 has turned a crowded safe-haven trade into a test of patience.

The metal is still sitting on a year of large gains and geopolitical risk has not disappeared, but Thursday’s price action showed that investors are again treating interest rates as the dominant force.

A firm dollar, rising expectations of Federal Reserve hikes and caution before the US inflation print left bullion near a more than seven-month low.

Spot gold fell 0.4% to $3,985.89 an ounce, while August futures eased to $4,001.60, keeping the market on the defensive after Wednesday’s sharper drop.

Dollar rally changes the gold equation

Gold’s weakness was driven less by a collapse in haven demand than by the renewed strength of the dollar.

The US currency advanced for a third straight session and touched a 13-month high, making bullion more expensive for buyers using other currencies.

The bigger issue is the interest-rate backdrop.

Traders are pricing in three Fed hikes this year, with about a 67% chance of an increase in September, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.

That is a difficult setting for gold because the metal pays no income.

When cash and bonds look more rewarding, bullion has to work harder to attract fresh inflows.

Inflation data takes centre stage

The immediate test is the US personal consumption expenditures report due later on Thursday.

As the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge, the data will shape expectations for how far policymakers may go in trying to contain price pressure.

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent has backed Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s push to reduce forward guidance, while also urging policymakers to keep an open mind about the inflation impact of the Iran conflict.

For markets, that points to a less predictable policy path. It also means every inflation print now carries more weight for assets that are sensitive to yields.

Geopolitics offers limited support

Middle East developments have prevented a cleaner bearish turn in gold.

Israel and Lebanon are discussing a US-backed plan that could see Israeli forces transfer parts of occupied southern Lebanese territory to the Lebanese military, a possible step towards easing one layer of regional tension.

Still, the main driver for bullion remains macro rather than geopolitics.

Silver fell 0.2% to $57.33 an ounce and platinum lost 0.2% to $1,575.85, while palladium rose 0.3% to $1,170.25.

For gold, the next line is psychological as much as technical.

Holding below $4,000 keeps sellers in control unless the PCE data weakens the dollar or softens the Fed-hike narrative.