Gold’s Crisis Conundrum: Why Iran Tensions Are Fueling a Selloff, Not a Rally
A curious contradiction is playing out in the commodities market. The US military struck Iranian positions near the Strait of Hormuz, a tanker came under fire, and oil prices shot up around 2%. Yet gold, the traditional haven, took a sharp knock — sliding 1.47% on Thursday to $4,422 an ounce, with a intraday low of $4,397.86, its weakest in nearly two months.
The selling looks counterintuitive, but the logic is brutally straightforward: escalating energy costs fan inflation fears, and that keeps the Federal Reserve on a hawkish path. Higher oil prices feed into broader price pressures, strengthening the case for the Fed to hold rates elevated — or even raise them further. For a non-yielding asset like gold, that’s a direct hit to its appeal.
Fed officials drove the point home on Thursday. Neel Kashkari stressed that inflation control remains the singular focus. Lisa Cook said rates should stay steady for now and did not rule out additional tightening. Philip Jefferson judged current policy to be appropriate. Their collective message: no pivot in sight. With real yields on Treasuries still attractive, the opportunity cost of holding bullion has become punishing.
The dollar added to the pressure. The geopolitical shock triggered a flight into the greenback, making gold more expensive for buyers outside the dollar zone. That suppressed the safe-haven reflex that typically accompanies such crises. Gold now sits roughly 18% below its 52-week high of $5,450, reached in January. While it still stands 42% higher year-on-year — from $3,335 — the current pullback shows that its crisis-hedge credentials have limits.
The weakness is spreading across the precious metals complex. Silver lost 1.7% to $73.34, platinum fell 0.5%, and palladium declined 0.7%. The S&P GSCI Precious Metals Index, at around 5,962 points, has shed over 3.2% year-to-date. The message is clear: macro forces and dollar strength, not physical demand, are calling the shots.
The next test arrives later on Thursday with the release of PCE data — the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge. A hotter-than-expected reading would further dim hopes for rate cuts and likely give the dollar another lift, a bearish scenario for gold. A softer print, on the other hand, could quickly turn sentiment. The metal has been trading in a tight $4,400–$4,600 channel for roughly ten days; the PCE numbers may determine which side of that range gives way.
Any fresh disruption to shipping through the Strait of Hormuz — through which about a fifth of global oil and LNG shipments pass — could amplify the rate-driven headwind. For gold to reclaim its safe-haven mantle, either the Fed would need to blink, or oil prices would have to stop feeding into rate expectations. Right now, neither appears likely.
Gold Hangs in Balance as Stagflation Fears Collide With Rate-Hike Expectations and India Tariff Shock
Gold is locked in a multi-front battle that has kept it oscillating in a narrow range, with the metal changing hands at $4,481 an ounce on Thursday — 18% below its January peak of $5,450 and roughly 3.5% beneath its 50-day moving average of $4,643. The week’s macroeconomic data dump, headlined by the first-quarter GDP revision and the April PCE price index, could break the deadlock.
The preliminary GDP reading of 2.0% annualized growth already missed the 2.3% Wall Street consensus. Any upward revision to the PCE deflator within today’s second estimate would harden the stagflation thesis — a combination of slowing expansion and sticky price pressures that historically has been a powerful tailwind for bullion. Consumer inflation hit 3.8% year-on-year in April, the hottest pace since mid-2023, with core services inflation accelerating to 0.4% month-on-month from 0.1% in the prior quarter.
Yet that same inflation data is also fueling expectations of tighter monetary policy. CME FedWatch data shows a 67% probability that the Federal Reserve will not cut rates further this year, and a 47.4% chance of a rate increase by year-end; the odds of a 25-basis-point hike specifically in December have risen to 51%. With the fed funds rate stuck at 3.5% to 3.75%, non-yielding gold loses appeal as interest rate expectations climb.
The dollar is amplifying the headwind. The DXY index holds above 99, making dollar-denominated bullion more expensive for overseas buyers. The Conference Board’s consumer confidence index slipped 0.7 points to 93.1 in May, with the present situation component dropping 3.2 points to 121.2 — a decline that reflects persistent price and energy concerns. While weak sentiment alone could support gold, when combined with rising inflation anxiety it tends to strengthen the case for a more hawkish Fed, muting any safe-haven lift.
Geopolitical tension adds another layer of complexity. Iran on Tuesday accused the United States of violating a ceasefire near the Strait of Hormuz, a flashpoint that would normally drive haven flows. This time, however, the same conflict is pushing oil prices higher and stoking inflation expectations, which in turn reinforces rate-hike bets — effectively neutralizing the geopolitical bid for gold.
On the demand side, a tariff shock from India is set to remove meaningful buying pressure. On May 13, New Delhi raised import duties on gold from 6% to 15%, splitting the increase between the basic duty (5% to 10%) and the agricultural infrastructure cess (1% to 5%). The move came after April imports surged 82% year-on-year to $5.62 billion, crushing the rupee, which has dropped more than 7% since January. The World Gold Council expects the tariff to slash Indian jewelry and bar demand by 50 to 60 tonnes this year, a decline of roughly 10%.
Offsetting that weakness is unprecedented buying from official institutions. Global gold demand reached $193 billion in the first quarter of 2026, a 74% surge year-on-year, according to the World Gold Council. Central banks added a net 244 tonnes to their reserves. Chinese bar and coin demand jumped 67% to a record 207 tonnes, while the People’s Bank of China’s holdings hit an all-time high of approximately 2,309 tonnes. Since 2022, central banks have been acquiring roughly 1,000 tonnes of gold annually — about five times the average pace of the previous decade.
This structural support has kept major banks bullish despite the recent pullback. J.P. Morgan maintains a year-end target of $6,000 an ounce, Goldman Sachs sees $5,400, and ANZ forecasts $5,600. But before any of those levels come into play, gold must first find a catalyst. Thursday’s twin releases — the GDP revision and the PCE price index, both at 8:30 a.m. Eastern Time — will provide the next directional signal. A strong inflation print would deepen gold’s slide; a softer one could reignite the growth-scared bid that had traders piling into bullion earlier in the year.