- Gold kicks off the new week on a weaker note as inflation concerns continue to boost the USD.
- The risk of a further escalation of Middle East tensions lends some support to the commodity.
- The technical setup favors the XAU/USD bears and backs the case for further near-term losses.
Gold (XAU/USD) recovers over $100 from a four-day low, touched earlier this Monday, and now trades above the $5,100 mark heading into the European session, still down over 0.40% for the day. Investors remain worried about the effects of a protracted Middle East conflict on Crude Oil prices and the global economy, which, in turn, acts as a tailwind for the safe-haven precious metal.
The joint US-Israeli campaign against Iran enters its tenth day on Monday, with no signs of an end to hostilities. Moreover, Iran named Ayatollah Ali Khamenei’s son, Mojtaba Khamenei, as the new Supreme Leader, signaling hardliners remain firmly in charge. This raises the risk of a further escalation of tensions as the move is unlikely to be welcomed by US President Donald Trump, who had declared the son “unacceptable”.
Meanwhile, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz – a vital shipping route for oil and gas – fuels worries about an energy shock, which could disrupt economic activity. These further temper investors’ appetite for riskier assets, which is evident from a sea of red across the global equity markets, and further lend support to the Gold.
Meanwhile, an intraday surge of over 25% in Crude Oil prices fueled inflation concerns and further dimmed the prospects for near‑term rate reductions by the US Federal Reserve (Fed), offsetting Friday’s dismal US Nonfarm Payrolls (NFP) report. This, in turn, lifts the US Dollar (USD) to a fresh high since November 2025 and should keep a lid on any further recovery for the non-yielding Gold, warranting caution for bullish traders.
XAU/USD 4-hour chart
Gold defends 200-EMA pivotal support on H4; not out of the woods yet
The near-term bias is neutral with a modest downside tilt, as the Gold price oscillates above the rising 200-period Exponential Moving Average (EMA) on the 4-hour chart, showing that the broader uptrend remains intact but momentum has cooled. The Moving Average Convergence Divergence (MACD) indicator slips marginally below its signal line around the zero mark and the histogram has turned slightly negative, suggesting fading bullish pressure rather than an outright bearish regime. The Relative Strength Index at 43 hovers below the 50 midline, aligning with a consolidative tone after the late pullback from this month’s highs.
Immediate support emerges at the $5,060 region, guarding the more important $5,000 area where the 200-period EMA converges with recent reaction lows, and a break below this zone would open the way toward $4,960. On the upside, initial resistance is located around $5,140, the latest swing high before the current drift lower, followed by $5,180 as the next barrier to restore a more convincing bullish profile. A sustained move above $5,180 would neutralize the current downside bias and expose the $5,230 area, while failure to hold above $5,000 would shift focus toward a deeper corrective phase.
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