Gold (XAUUSD) is down 2.02% at Jun 17 15:20(ET), now at $4243.84, with a 7-day up of 4.24%.

Gold prices faced a sharp selloff, driven by the dual impact of a highly hawkish pivot from the Federal Reserve and a sudden contraction in safe-haven risk premiums. The primary catalyst for the decline was the outcome of the Federal Open Market Committee meeting, which marked the debut of the newly appointed Fed Chair, Kevin Warsh. Although the central bank kept the benchmark interest rate unchanged at 3.50% to 3.75% as widely anticipated, the updated Summary of Economic Projections and the closely watched dot plot delivered a significant hawkish shock to the market.
The updated dot plot revealed a major shift in policymaker expectations, with the median projection indicating that interest rates will end the year higher than previously forecast, effectively erasing the rate cuts projected earlier in the year. Nearly half of the committee members signaled support for potential rate hikes later in the year, pointing to sticky inflation and a highly resilient labor market. Furthermore, the Fed streamlined its policy statement, removing prior language that signaled an easing bias or implied that the next move would be a rate cut. For non-yielding bullion, the prospect of a prolonged period of restrictive monetary policy and elevated real yields dramatically increased the opportunity cost of holding the asset, prompting swift institutional liquidation.
Simultaneously, the geopolitical risk premium that had previously supported gold began to unwind rapidly. Investor optimism grew regarding a tentative diplomatic agreement between the United States and Iran, which is expected to restore critical oil flows and ease tensions in the Middle East. The prospect of a diplomatic resolution triggered a selloff in crude oil, which diminished broader inflation expectations and reduced the immediate demand for safe-haven hedges.
This combination of rising real yield expectations, a firmer US dollar, and deflating geopolitical anxiety triggered a technical breakdown in gold. Bullion broke below key short-term support levels, triggering stop-loss orders and accelerating the downward momentum during the trading session. While structural demand from global central banks remains a supportive long-term trend, the near-term outlook for gold is heavily constrained by the Fed's aggressive focus on price stability and the deferral of the monetary easing cycle.
Technically, Gold (XAUUSD) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of -7.251, indicating a sell signal. The RSI at 40.115 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 59.633 suggests sell condition. Please monitor closely.

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