Gold Crashes to 7-Week Low as Rising Yields Crush Bullion Demand
Gold prices suffered a sharp selloff, tumbling more than 2% on Tuesday and extending losses into Wednesday as investors rushed toward higher-yielding assets and away from safe-haven metals. The precious metal slid to its weakest level since March 30, pressured by soaring Treasury yields, a stronger US dollar, and mounting fears that inflation could keep interest rates elevated for longer.
Gold typically performs well during uncertainty, but the current market environment is different. Investors are focusing on the possibility that persistent inflation and expensive energy prices could force the Federal Reserve to stay aggressive on interest rates.
Higher rates boost returns on government bonds and savings instruments, making gold — which pays no interest — less attractive in comparison.
At the same time, the US dollar strengthened, adding further pressure on bullion prices globally.
Markets are now closely watching the Federal Reserve’s latest meeting minutes for clues on future monetary policy. Traders want to know whether policymakers are considering additional rate hikes or simply planning to keep rates elevated for an extended period.
Any hawkish signals could continue pressuring gold and silver prices in the near term.
Silver faced even heavier selling pressure than gold, plunging 6% in one session and erasing a large portion of its recent rally. The sharp decline reflects broader weakness across precious metals as macroeconomic concerns dominate investor sentiment.
Gold traders are now navigating a difficult mix of:
Unless inflation starts cooling and bond yields stabilize, precious metals could remain under pressure in the coming weeks.
Gold prices dropped because rising Treasury yields and a stronger US dollar reduced demand for non-yielding safe-haven assets.
When bond yields rise, investors can earn better returns from fixed-income assets, making gold less attractive.
Higher oil prices increase inflation fears, which may force central banks to keep interest rates high.
Markets are focused on the Federal Reserve meeting minutes for signals on future interest-rate policy.
Yes. Silver plunged around 6% in one session and is down nearly 20% from last week’s highs.
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