Gold Hits Near 2-Week Low As Soaring Dollar Outweighs Fragile US-Iran Nuclear Talks

Gold prices fell 1.1% on Wednesday to $4,064.01 per ounce, touching a near two-week low as the US dollar hit a one-year high. The drop is driven by increasing trader bets on three Federal Reserve interest rate hikes this year.

 
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Spot gold fell 1.1% | Image: Unsplash

Gold ​extended losses on Wednesday, touching its lowest in almost two weeks as the ‌dollar climbed due to rising bets on U.S. interest rate hikes, while investors assessed conflicting signals on the U.S.-Iran peace talks.

Spot gold fell 1.1% to $4,064.01 per ounce by 0431 GMT, having earlier hit its lowest since June 11. ​U.S. gold futures for August delivery declined 1.7% to $4,080.80.

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Tuesday ​that Iran had agreed to nuclear inspections into "infinity," while Tehran said it had ⁠made no such concession in negotiations, raising questions about the viability of their fragile peace ​deal. 

The two sides also disagreed on the details of a provision that would allow Iran access ​to funds frozen in overseas accounts.

"What we're witnessing here is the evolution of the pressure that gold came under as a function of the war," said Ilya Spivak, head of global macro at Tastylive.

"The sort ​of inflation to higher rates dynamic has appeared in bonds falling, yields rising, the dollar ​rising, and gold falling."

Bullion has fallen about 23% since the onset of the U.S.-Israeli war on Iran in ‌late ⁠February, as mounting inflationary pressure has given way to expectations of interest rate hikes by the U.S. Federal Reserve.

While gold is traditionally seen as an inflation hedge, it loses its appeal as a non-yielding asset in a high-interest-rate environment.

The dollar hit a more than one-year high, making ​bullion more expensive for ​overseas buyers.

Traders are pricing ⁠in three interest rate hikes from the U.S. Federal Reserve this year, compared with bets of one hike before last week's Fed meeting, ​according to the CME FedWatch Tool. FEDWATCH/

Investors now await the U.S. Personal ​Consumption Expenditures ⁠data, the Fed's preferred inflation gauge, due on Thursday, for further cues on monetary policy.

"If we continue to mostly focus on inflation and we take out the $4,000 level, then we're going to be ⁠in ​the direction of $3,800, and we're going to have a conversation ​about whether a test of $3,500 follows next," Spivak added.

Spot silver fell 1.6% to $61 per ounce, platinum lost 1.2% to $1,632.04, and palladium ​was down 1% at $1,225.35.

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Published By : Shourya Jha

Published On: 24 June 2026 at 11:42 IST