Gold’s slide below $4,000 has turned into more than a technical break.
It is now a signal that traders are losing patience with bullion while the dollar and US rate expectations dominate the market.
The metal was set for a fourth straight weekly decline on Friday, caught between sticky inflation, a hawkish Federal Reserve repricing and a stronger greenback.
Spot gold fell 0.9% to $3,991.49 an ounce, while August futures dropped 1% to $4,007.30.
For the week, bullion was on course to lose about 4%, extending a sharp reversal from January’s record high.
Dollar strength tightens the squeeze
The immediate pressure is coming from the dollar. The US Dollar Index held near its strongest level since May 2025 and was heading for a second consecutive weekly gain.
That makes bullion more expensive for buyers using other currencies and weakens physical demand at the margin.
The dollar’s strength has been driven by a rapid shift in Fed expectations.
Traders now expect three rate increases this year and see about a 64% chance of a September hike, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.
Market analysts say that hawkish repricing has changed gold’s appeal.
The metal can still work as an inflation hedge, but it struggles when investors can earn higher returns from cash and bonds.
Inflation hedge loses to rate reality
The irony is that inflation is still high. US data released on Thursday showed price growth rose above 4% in May for the first time in three years, broadly matching forecasts.
In normal conditions, that would support gold.
This is not a normal setup. Investors are treating stronger inflation as a reason for tighter policy rather than a reason to buy bullion.
That has pushed yields and the dollar higher, leaving non-yielding assets exposed.
Gold has now fallen about 29% from its January 29 record of $5,594.82.
Some analysts see the correction extending further if the dollar rally continues, with long-term downside levels around $3,400 coming back into market discussion.
Wider metals complex feels the strain
The pressure is not limited to gold. Silver fell 3.2% to $56.01 an ounce, platinum lost 2.4% to $1,563.20 and palladium slipped 1.6% to $1,165.93.
All three were also heading for weekly losses.
That broad weakness suggests investors are reducing exposure across precious metals, not just reacting to gold’s break below $4,000.
For bullion, the next move depends on whether incoming data softens the Fed narrative.
Until then, the market remains trapped in a simple but difficult trade: inflation is high, but the dollar is stronger and rates are expected to rise faster.
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