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Gold Pares Gains After Iran Says Ceasefire Deal With US Violated - BLOOMBERG
BY Yihui Xie and Yvonne Yue Li
(Bloomberg) -- Gold pared gains as the Iranian parliament speaker said a temporary ceasefire agreement with the US has been violated.
Bullion rose 0.4% after earlier gaining as much as 3.2% to above $4,800 an ounce. Mohammad-Bagher Ghalibaf said that three clauses of the ceasefire proposal have been violated so far. Treasury yields erased losses while the dollar trimmed losses, weighing on gold as it doesn’t pay interest and is priced in the greenback.
A “bilateral ceasefire or negotiations is unreasonable,” Ghalibaf said in a statement posted on X. The “workable basis on which to negotiate” has been openly and clearly violated, even before the negotiations began, he said.
Earlier, gold climbed along with global equities markets amid a sharp rebound in risk appetite as a two-week truce between the US and Iran eased concerns about a global economic crisis. Oil plunged below $100 a barrel and the dollar also fell, supporting gold.
The decline in crude prices allayed worries about an energy crunch that could fuel inflation, reviving bets that the Federal Reserve will cut interest rates this year. Traders now see less than a one-in-three chance that the Fed will deliver a quarter-point reduction by the end of 2026. Lower rates are typically positive for bullion as it pays no interest.
Since the war in the Middle East began, bullion has traded largely in tandem with stocks, with its traditional haven appeal dimmed by some investors’ need to cover losses elsewhere in their portfolios. For the rally to hold, traders will need confirmation that the ceasefire will last and energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz normalize.
“Gold’s push above $4,800 reflects a recalibration of risk, rather than a full regime shift,” said Ahmad Assiri, a strategist at Pepperstone Group Ltd. “The move higher suggests markets are now pricing in a lower probability of prolonged disruption, while still retaining a meaningful discount versus the pre-Iran setup.”
Gold has fallen about 10% since the war began at the end of February. A moderate recovery in recent days had been driven by hopes for a ceasefire, as well as expectations that a slowdown in global economic growth will act as a counter to bets on stable or higher borrowing costs.
“In the near term, gold remains highly sensitive to political developments,” said Assiri. “The current ceasefire provides a window of relief, but it is conditional and fragile. Any sign of breakdown, particularly around the Strait of Hormuz, would likely reintroduce volatility” and downside risk, he added.
Spot gold rose 0.4% to $4,723.39 an ounce as of 4:41 p.m. in New York. Silver gained 1.7%, while platinum and palladium rose. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, a gauge of the US currency, fell 0.8%.
--With assistance from Preeti Soni and William Clowes.




