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

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

Gold prices fell on Thursday as a result of hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve, a stronger dollar and the U.S. Iran ceasefire agreement that lowered inflation fears and pushed oil markets down.

At 1:30 pm, spot gold was down by 0.8% to $4,225.39 an ounce. ET (1730 GMT). Last week, prices reached their lowest level since November 2025.

U.S. Gold Futures closed 3.1% lower, at $4,245.9.

The Fed's hawkish stance yesterday was the most important thing. The dollar is at new heights for the year. This, in turn, keeps gold under pressure, said Peter Grant.

Nine out of 19 policymakers believe that a rate hike is needed later in the year.

After the policy announcement, the U.S. Dollar climbed and reached a new high of one year on Thursday. This made greenback-priced gold more expensive for foreign buyers.

According to the CME FedWatch Tool, markets are pricing in an 85% probability of a U.S. interest rate increase in December. This is higher than 61%, which was the chance before the Fed made its policy statement.

In an environment of high interest rates, gold, which is a non-yielding 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. and Iran released a text of a interim agreement that their presidents had signed to end their conflict. U.S. President Donald Trump threatened to resume attacks on Iran and to kill Iranian officials?if they did not honor their commitments.

Brent futures fell to their lowest level since March 2, the first trading day after the initial U.S.-Israeli strike on Iran. WTI was at its lowest point since March 4.

Silver fell by 3%, to $65.96 an ounce. Platinum dropped 1.9%, to $1703.94, while palladium lost 2.2%, to $1285.96. (Reporting and editing by Tasimzahid and Daniel Wallis; Bengaluru-based Anjana Anil)

(source: Reuters)