Palladium (XPDUSD) is down 2.13% at Jun 23 01:10(ET), now at $1237.77, with a 7-day down of 8.15%.

The recent downward pressure on spot palladium is primarily driven by a combination of a hawkish macroeconomic outlook, easing geopolitical risk premiums, and persistent structural headwinds in its primary demand sector.
From a macroeconomic perspective, the Federal Open Market Committee's mid-June policy meeting introduced a hawkish surprise by signaling a higher-for-longer interest rate path. The upward revision of year-end rate projections and the potential for further tightening have supported the US dollar and elevated US Treasury yields. Because palladium is a non-yielding asset, the high-interest-rate environment has triggered a broader liquidation across the precious and industrial metals complexes, forcing capital out of the platinum-group metals sector.
Compounding this macroeconomic pressure is the significant easing of geopolitical risk premiums. Diplomatic progress, specifically around de-escalation talks regarding key maritime trade routes like the Strait of Hormuz, has significantly reduced fears of supply chain and logistics disruptions. The establishment of de-confliction mechanisms has calmed the market, unwinding the risk premiums that previously supported prices amidst broader Middle East tensions.
On the demand side, palladium continues to face severe structural headwinds from the automotive sector, which accounts for the vast majority of its consumption in catalytic converters. High global borrowing costs have weighed on vehicle production and manufacturing activity globally. More structurally, the rapid and ongoing transition to battery electric vehicles, particularly in major automotive markets like China, represents a long-term threat to demand. As electric vehicles displace traditional internal combustion engines, long-term industrial demand expectations for palladium continue to be downgraded.
Furthermore, institutional sentiment remains cautious as market participants price in a projected global market surplus for the platinum-group metals complex in 2026. This oversupply outlook is exacerbated by rising secondary recycling rates and recent price target cuts from major financial institutions, which have capped any short-term technical rebounds. Without a significant supply disruption or a pivot toward looser monetary policy, the structural surplus and soft industrial demand are expected to keep a lid on palladium prices.
Technically, Palladium (XPDUSD) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of 7.115, indicating a neutral signal. The RSI at 38.525 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 67.996 suggests sell condition. Please monitor closely.

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