Gold Market

Gold’s Three-Week Run Ends on Iran Volatility

Happy Friday, traders. Welcome to our weekly market wrap, where we take a look back at these last five trading days with a focus on the market news, economic data, and headlines that had the most impact on gold prices and other key correlated assets — and may continue to in the future.

So, what kind of week has it been?

  1. Gold will snap a three-week streak of weekly gains, set to close near $4,710 after giving up its consolidation near $4,800.

  2. Tuesday’s aggressive pre-market selloff took spot to a weekly nadir of $4,675 on US threats to resume bombing Iran before the original ceasefire deadline; buyers stepped in below $4,700, and the ceasefire was unilaterally extended within 24 hours.

  3. Gold could only climb back to $4,770 before drifting lower for most of the week, weighed down by a lack of specificity around ceasefire extension terms and a reported collapse of a second round of direct peace talks.

  4. Friday’s announcement that the Justice Department is dropping its investigation into Fed Chair Jerome Powell — combined with an uninspiring Warsh confirmation hearing earlier in the week — lifted 2026 rate-cut odds and sparked a late-week bounce, with the FOMC decision Wednesday and Q1 GDP Thursday now looming as next week’s key catalysts.

Gold prices will snap a streak of three consecutive week-over-week gains on Friday after a dull week for the precious metal in which prices still demonstrated a consistent level of buying interest but ultimately spent much of the last five trading days under downward pressure. Having given up the opportunity, for now, to consolidate near $4,800, the spot market looks set to close in the neighborhood of $4,725.

As we anticipated, due to the sparse amount of important macroeconomic data on tap this week (and with FOMC officials in the traditional silent period ahead of next week’s Fed Day), gold price action was dominated this week by reporting and rhetoric centered around the highly tenuous ceasefire in place between the US, its Israeli partners, and Iran, during which negotiations for a more permanent peace go on. Although ultimately — at least as far as the next week or so is concerned — the US administration would unilaterally decree a somewhat indefinite extension of the ceasefire less than 24 hours later, the sharpest turn in the gold market came in the early hours of Tuesday morning, with an aggressive selloff just prior to the start of US cash trading that saw the yellow metal fall from the previous consolidation line of $4,800/oz to the weekly nadir of $4,675.

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