Gold’s Recovery Remains Fragile Amid Fed and Geopolitical Pressures
Given the current date of June 22, 2026, we see gold’s small recovery as fragile and likely short-lived. The dominant forces remain a strong US Dollar, supported by hawkish Federal Reserve expectations and geopolitical instability. Any strength in gold prices appears to be a selling opportunity rather than a new bullish trend. We are paying close attention to interest rate probabilities, which heavily influence the non-yielding precious metal. The CME FedWatch Tool is showing that traders are pricing in a nearly 90% chance of a rate hike by the end of the year, a conviction level not seen since the aggressive hiking cycle of 2022. This environment makes holding US dollars more attractive than holding gold.Technical and Market Strategy for Gold
The renewed tension with Iran is a key factor, but it seems to be boosting the US Dollar as a safe haven more than gold. Historically, threats to the Strait of Hormuz, a chokepoint for about 20% of global oil supply, create a flight to dollar-based assets. This dynamic puts a firm cap on any potential rallies in the XAU/USD pair for the coming weeks. From a technical standpoint, the failed attempt to reclaim the 200-day EMA near $4,334 is a significant bearish signal. We view this level as a critical line in the sand for initiating new short positions. Until gold can close decisively above it, the path of least resistance remains to the downside. For derivatives traders, this suggests a strategy of buying put options or establishing bear call spreads to profit from either a continued slide or range-bound price action. The high level of geopolitical uncertainty is elevating implied volatility, but the fundamental pressure from the Fed’s stance provides a clear directional bias for us. We would use any strength toward the $4,300 level to build our bearish positions.Start trading now — click here to create your real VT Markets account.