Spot gold traded at $3,972 per ounce at 9:05 a.m. ET on June 24, 2026, its first sustained move below the $4,000 level since November 2025.
The breach followed President Donald Trump’s Truth Social post clarifying terms of the U.S.-Iran framework agreement, including no tolls or charges on Strait of Hormuz shipping and controlled release of Iranian funds exclusively for U.S. agricultural purchases.
Gold opened near $4,113 the prior session before dropping sharply. It has now declined approximately 29% from its January 2026 all-time high of $5,608.
Like gold, the silver price also exhibited amplified weakness, trading below $60 and consistent with its higher beta to risk sentiment shifts.
Trump’s June 24 statement directly addressed reporting skepticism around the mid-June framework. It emphasized toll-free passage during the 60-day negotiation window and U.S.-controlled funds directed only to American farmers for corn, wheat, soybeans, and staples to meet Iran’s food needs.
This clarity accelerated the fade in the war premium that had earlier supported gold. Precedent from prior Middle East episodes shows safe-haven demand often evaporates quickly on de-escalation signals, even as longer-term inflation or supply concerns linger.
Gold advocate Peter Schiff views these corrections as potential buying opportunities. He has cautioned against waiting for deeper dips and argues that markets pricing aggressive Fed rate hikes overlook sticky inflation.
Schiff contends any politically driven policy pivot would favor precious metals over equities due to the current disconnect in expectations.
Progress on reopening the Strait lowered near-term oil disruption risks, easing associated inflation expectations.
Resilient U.S. economic data simultaneously sustained real yields and dollar strength, classic headwinds for non-yielding gold.
The $4,000 level served as key psychological support after the 2025, early 2026 rally.
Its breach signals broad pricing-out of the acute Iran conflict phase.
While near-term direction ties to verifiable deal progress, structural factors such as central bank buying remain intact for longer-term bulls.