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Gold falls as Fed signals hawkish boost dollar and rate hike bets

Gold prices remained stable on Thursday, despite a hawkish Federal Reserve policy and a stronger Dollar. The U.S. Iran ceasefire agreement, which reduced inflation fears and sent oil prices lower, also helped to keep gold at a reasonable level.

At 10:30 am, spot gold was down by 0.3% to $4,246.55 an ounce. ET (1430 GMT). Last week, prices reached their lowest level since November 2025.

U.S. Gold Futures dropped 2.7% to $4.264.30.

The Fed's hawkish tilt yesterday was most important. The dollar is at new record highs, and this keeps gold under pressure, according to Peter Grant, senior metals analyst at Zaner Metals.

The Fed kept interest rates steady on Wednesday but nine of 19 policymakers believe that a rate hike is needed later in the year.

After the policy announcement, the U.S. Dollar climbed and is now at an all-time high. This makes greenback-priced gold more expensive for foreign buyers.

According to the CME FedWatch Tool, markets are pricing in a 85% chance that rates will be raised in the U.S. in December. This is higher than 61%, which was the chance before the Fed policy statement.

In a high-interest rate environment, gold, which is a nonyielding investment, struggles. Since the start of the Middle East conflict, prices have been under pressure as fuel costs increased and inflation fears were stoked.

On Wednesday, the U.S. released the text from an interim agreement that their presidents had signed to end their conflict. U.S. Donald Trump threatened to resume attacks on Iran and to?kill Iranian officials? if it failed to honor its commitments.

Brent futures fell to their lowest level since March 2, the first trading day after 'the initial U.S. - Israeli strikes against Iran. WTI also dropped to its lowest level since March 4.

Silver spot fell by 1.8%, to $66.75 an ounce. Platinum lost 0.9%, to $1718.27. Palladium dropped 2.1%, to $1285.10. (Reporting by Anjana Anil in Bengaluru; Editing by Tasim Zahid)

(source: Reuters)