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Gold firms benefit from lower oil prices following US-Iran ceasefire agreement

Gold prices rose on Thursday, as lower oil costs following the 'U.S.-Iran truce deal' helped bullion recover losses from the previous session caused by Federal Reserve rhetoric that was hawkish.

As of 0830 GMT on Thursday, spot gold rose 0.6% to $4,284.67 an ounce after falling 1.7% Wednesday. U.S. Gold Futures dropped 1.8% to $4304.30. Oil prices dropped after the U.S. and Iran signed a temporary agreement to end the Iran War, reopen?Strait of Hormuz and lift U.S. sanctions against Tehran's oil.

Han Tan, Chief Market Analyst at Bybit, said that gold is rebounding today after markets quickly moved past the Fed’s hawkish signal. Bulls are opting to squeeze even more gains from the US-Iran interim agreement.

Tan said that "the hawkish Fed will leave spot gold with a bias to dip back into the sub-$4,000 water rather than reclaiming $5,000 in the second half 2026." The Fed kept interest rates unchanged on Wednesday. However, policymakers are expecting a rise in borrowing costs this year due to growing concerns over inflation that is above the US. The central bank has a 2% inflation target. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh announced at a press conference that he would be launching a number of task forces in order to examine central bank operations.

According to CME FedWatch, the markets have a 85% chance of an increase in U.S. rates in December.

In an environment of high interest rates, gold is less appealing because it has no yield.

ANZ stated in a note that the "gold market is underpinned by physical demand from China and central banks buying."

The report added that structural drivers such as geopolitics, de-dollarisation and other factors remain supportive.

Silver spot rose by 0.4%, to $68.24 an ounce. Platinum fell by 0.1%, to $1735.34, while palladium remained flat at $1312.5.

(source: Reuters)