TradingKey - US Treasury yields have remained firm this week, with the 10-year note trading largely in a 4.1%–4.3% range and touching around 4.27% at the weekly high — noticeably above the roughly 4.05% level seen at the start of the month. Since bond prices move inversely to yields, the climb reflects renewed pressure across the Treasury market. Even after a CPI print that met expectations, real yields continued to edge higher.

The opportunity cost of holding non‑yielding assets such as gold (XAUUSD) has risen. Combined with a stronger U.S. dollar, bullion has repeatedly shown a pattern this week of being lifted initially by geopolitical safe‑haven demand, only to be pushed back by higher yields and the firmer greenback.
While elevated oil prices stemming from Middle East tensions have fueled both inflation expectations and safe‑haven demand — supportive factors for gold prices — yields moving up have led markets to scale back expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts this year. That shift has turned into a headwind for gold.

Bullion is no longer trending steadily higher but instead fluctuating within a broad range at elevated levels. Short‑term rallies are often capped whenever Treasury yields regain strength.