Precious metals experienced substantial appreciation during Wednesday’s session, with spot gold advancing 2.3% to settle at $4,662.70 per ounce in New York markets, while futures contracts reached $4,668.80 per troy ounce—marking a 2.2% daily increase. Silver demonstrated even stronger performance, surging 4.2% to $75.91. Both platinum and palladium registered positive movements as well.

The rally followed President Trump’s social media announcement declaring substantial advancement in diplomatic discussions with Iranian leadership, alongside his decision to suspend American-coordinated naval operations intended to escort commercial vessels navigating the Strait of Hormuz during ongoing negotiations.
Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth validated that the ceasefire initiated approximately one month earlier remained effective. Secretary of State Marco Rubio emphasized that offensive military actions had concluded, with American efforts now concentrated on safeguarding commercial maritime traffic. Iran’s Foreign Minister Abbas Araghchi characterized the discussions as “making progress.”
Despite optimistic statements from government officials, reports emerged of a commercial cargo ship sustaining damage from an unidentified projectile one day following confrontations near the strategic waterway—underscoring that regional instability persists.
The U.S. dollar index’s 0.5% retreat contributed additional momentum to gold prices, as dollar depreciation reduces acquisition costs for purchasers transacting in alternative currencies. ING strategists Warren Patterson and Ewa Manthey observed that concerns regarding potential escalation continue sustaining gold’s traditional safe-haven characteristics.
They suggested that a sustained ceasefire arrangement could diminish inflationary pressures and reduce the probability of Federal Reserve monetary tightening—dynamics that would generally favor precious metals. Assets without yield, such as gold, typically perform favorably when interest rate projections decline.
The trajectory for gold remains uncertain. Fixed-income market participants are progressively incorporating expectations that the Federal Reserve’s next policy adjustment will involve raising rather than lowering rates. This sentiment shift is constraining gold’s near-term appreciation potential.
Market observers are intensely focused on forthcoming employment statistics, which may reveal stabilizing workforce conditions—potentially reinforcing inflation-related considerations in Federal Reserve policy deliberations.
Gold has declined more than 12% since tensions with Iran intensified in late February, and market strategists indicate positioning in the precious metal remains complex. Nicky Shiels, head of research and metals strategy at MKS PAMP SA, characterized precious metals as entering the summer season amid a “structural positioning paradox.”
Despite elevated total dollar investments in gold, the actual contract volume and ounce holdings remain comparatively modest. “The medium-term bull case on debasement, supply chain fragmentation, and monetary order breakdown remains intact,” Shiels stated, “but the near-term path to new highs requires generalist institutional capital to step in.”
She noted that seasonal trends combined with what she termed “exhausted retail” participation are insufficient to independently fuel the next significant upward movement.
According to ING analysts, gold’s subsequent primary catalyst will emerge from interest rate expectations—influenced by U.S. Treasury financing strategies and critical economic indicators scheduled for release in coming weeks.
The post Gold Surges 2.3% on U.S.-Iran Diplomatic Progress and Weakening Dollar appeared first on Blockonomi.