- Gold prolongs its downtrend for the fourth day and drops back closer to the YTD low on Monday.
- Major central banks adopt a hawkish stance amid inflation concerns and weigh on the commodity.
- Rising geopolitical tensions support the safe-haven precious metal, though the upside seems limited.
Gold (XAU/USD) adds to its recent heavy losses registered over the past three weeks or so and attracts some follow-through selling for the fourth consecutive day on Monday. The commodity dives to its lowest level since early January during the Asian session, though it finds some support ahead of the $4,300 mark. Any meaningful recovery, however, seems elusive in the wake of hawkish stances from major central banks, which tend to undermine the non-yielding yellow metal.
The Bank of Japan (BoJ) maintained its bias toward monetary policy normalization and warned that surging Crude Oil prices driven by the Middle East conflict could exacerbate inflationary pressures. Adding to this, the Bank of England (BoE) signaled a hawkish shift and potential interest rate hikes as early as April due to inflation stemming from the Iran war. Furthermore, the European Central Bank’s (ECB) hawkish messaging suggested that policymakers were prepared to act as soon as April 30 if price pressures intensify due to rising geopolitical tensions.
Meanwhile, the US Federal Reserve (Fed) raised the year-end inflation outlook (PCE), citing risks from higher energy prices due to the Iran war, and projected only one interest rate reduction this year, and one in 2027. This remains supportive of elevated US Treasury bond yields and continues to act as a tailwind for the US Dollar (USD), which turns out to be another factor exerting downward pressure on the Gold price. However, a further escalation of geopolitical tensions continues to benefit traditional safe-haven assets and help limit the downside for the precious metal.
In the latest developments, US President Donald Trump issued a 48-hour deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz and threatened to target Iran’s energy infrastructure if the demand is not met. Iran responded by threatening to escalate strikes on energy infrastructure and target critical water desalination facilities across the Middle East, should Trump make good on a promise to “obliterate” the country’s power plants. This, in turn, holds back traders from placing aggressive bearish bets and assists the Gold price in defending the $4,300 round figure.
- Gold nears YTD low; seems vulnerable as hawkish central banks counter geopolitical risks
- Gold set for third weekly loss as ‘higher-for-longer’ interest rate outlook weigh
- GBP/USD retreats as BoE hawkish shift meets resilient US Dollar
- Gold under pressure as Fed hawkish outlook weighs
- Gold extends losses as Fed hawkish outlook weighs









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