Market News
Gold Holds Losses as Iran Impasse Keeps Rate Hike Bets High
BY Yihui Xie
(Bloomberg) -- Gold held a decline as a lack of progress in reopening the Strait of Hormuz continued to fuel concerns over inflation and increase bets that global central banks may hike interest rates.
Bullion was trading around $4,465 an ounce, after falling almost 2% on Tuesday. Price pressures stemming from the Iran war helped fuel a selloff in global bond markets, with Treasury 30-year yields climbing to a level last seen on the brink of the global financial crisis in 2007.
President Donald Trump threatened to resume strikes on Iran in the coming days as part of a push to end the war, less than a day after saying he had just called off a US attack. The Republican-led US Senate signaled its opposition to extending the conflict in a procedural vote on Tuesday.
High energy prices have stoked inflation fears, raising the risk that the Federal Reserve and other central banks may need to keep rates elevated rather than deliver the cuts investors had expected before the US and Israel launched their war on Iran. Lower rates benefit gold, which doesn’t carry interest.
Gold has traded in a narrow range since falling sharply in the early days of the conflict as inflationary fears were moderated by the possibility of monetary easing on growth concerns. Bullion is down 15% since the war erupted.
“The current environment highlights an increasingly important distinction between what traders are focusing on in the short term and what investors continue to monitor over the long term,” Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank AS, said in a note. Meanwhile, a lack of fresh inflows into exchange-traded funds and volatility indicators point to “subdued participation and a market awaiting a clearer catalyst,” he added.
Silver was little changed after slumping 5% on Monday on the growing concerns over inflation. It surged to nearly $90 an ounce last week on optimism around AI-related equities and demand for metals used in data-center infrastructure. The white metal is down 21% since Feb. 27.
Spot gold was down 0.4% at $4,464.72 an ounce as of 12:38 p.m. in Singapore. Silver was 0.2% lower at $73.62. Platinum edged down and palladium rose. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, a gauge of the US currency, was marginally higher after ending the previous session up 0.4%.




