Gold steady as traders eye US inflation data, Iran ceasefire risks
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Gold was little changed on Thursday as investors held back ahead of key US inflation data and weighed the chances of a lasting ceasefire between Washington and Tehran.
Spot gold hovered near recent levels, while US gold futures edged lower, with traders reluctant to take large positions before fresh signals on the Federal Reserve’s policy path and greater clarity on whether the recent pause in hostilities in the Middle East will endure.
What is driving gold today
For now, bullion appears to be consolidating after a volatile run shaped by shifting expectations for US interest rates and the ebb and flow of geopolitical risk.
Investors have been balancing gold’s traditional appeal as a haven asset against the pressure that can come from a more hawkish rates outlook.
That has left price action relatively subdued.
Rather than chasing the metal higher, investors appear to be waiting for clearer direction from macroeconomic data and from developments in the Middle East.
Policy signals and data to watch
The next major catalyst for gold is likely to come from US inflation data and signals from the Federal Reserve.
Markets are watching upcoming price indicators and recent Fed commentary for clues on how long policymakers may need to keep rates elevated.
That matters because gold does not offer a yield. It tends to perform better when interest rates are falling, or when markets believe rate cuts are becoming more likely.
By contrast, a more hawkish policy backdrop can weigh on demand by lifting bond yields and increasing the opportunity cost of holding bullion.
Minutes from the Federal Open Market Committee’s latest meeting showed that policymakers remain open to keeping policy restrictive if inflation proves persistent, reinforcing a cautious tone across markets.
Geopolitics still offer support
Even so, the broader geopolitical backdrop may yet provide support for gold in the months ahead.
The fragile ceasefire between the United States and Iran has reduced the immediate risk of escalation, but uncertainty remains over whether it will hold.
Tensions across the region, including continued military activity and unresolved disputes, have kept investors alert to the possibility of renewed volatility.
That lingering uncertainty continues to underpin demand for safe-haven assets such as gold.
Other metals
Moves in other precious metals were mixed, with prices reflecting shifting expectations for interest rates and global growth.
These markets tend to be more sensitive to changes in the economic outlook and policy signals than gold itself.
For now, gold appears to be marking time.
The near-term direction will depend on whether US inflation data reinforce the case for higher-for-longer rates, or whether persistent geopolitical uncertainty restores the metal’s momentum as a haven.
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