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Economy & MarketsFriday, July 10, 2026

Gold slides as Gulf military strikes rekindle inflation and rate-hike bets

Spot gold heads for a weekly decline of more than 1% after Iranian forces attack US military infrastructure, pushing oil higher and reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates elevated.

Spot gold fell to around $4,106 per ounce on Friday, leaving the metal on course for a weekly loss of roughly 1.6%. The decline accelerated after Iranian armed forces struck US military infrastructure in Gulf states on Thursday, a day after Washington targeted Iran’s southern coastal and eastern provinces. The renewed hostilities drove crude oil towards a weekly gain and unsettled bullion markets that had briefly stabilised earlier in the session.

The mechanism linking the military escalation to gold prices runs through energy costs and monetary policy. Attacks that threaten the Strait of Hormuz raise the probability of supply disruptions, feeding into higher oil prices and, in turn, stoking inflation fears. Minutes from the Federal Reserve’s June meeting, released this week, showed that several policymakers saw grounds for a rate increase before the committee opted to hold steady. Markets now price a 64% probability of a September rate hike, up from around 54% a week ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Because gold yields no interest, a higher-rate environment reduces its appeal relative to yield-bearing assets.

London-based HSBC cut its average gold price forecast for 2026, citing a hawkish shift in US monetary policy expectations and a stronger dollar. Sydney-based analysts noted that any sharp spike in oil could reignite rate fears to gold’s detriment, even as the metal attracts some haven buying on dips. In physical markets, gold traded at a wide discount in India as price volatility weighed on demand, while Chinese demand held steady; the People’s Bank of China reported its largest monthly increase in gold reserves in more than two and a half years in June. Poland’s central bank disclosed it holds 632.4 tonnes of gold.

The next factual milestones are the US consumer price index data due next week and testimony from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh. A sustained rise in energy prices or a hawkish tone from the Chair could further test the $4,000 per ounce level that some traders view as psychological support.

Divergence — who tells it how
9%Low
3 blocs · positions from −0.20 to 0.00
CriticalFavorable
LATGLFIRN
Divergence between press blocs
Latin American press0.00neutral
Arab Gulf press0.00neutral
Iranian & allied press−0.20neutral
Latin American press0.00
Voice

Financial markets react to the combination of geopolitical conflict and restrictive monetary policy, without taking sides.

Mechanismtecnicismo economico

The gold drop is presented as a purely technical and economic phenomenon, detached from moral or political judgments.

Omission

The Latin American bloc omits the specific actors behind the conflict (US and Iran) and the nature of the military escalation, focusing only on the abstract 'combates en Oriente Medio'. This omission depoliticizes the story.

PragmatismDetachment
Arab Gulf press0.00
Voice

The Gulf region suffers the economic consequences of the military escalation between the US and Iran, and markets anticipate monetary tightening.

Mechanismcatenazione causale

It directly links regional security to Federal Reserve decisions, creating a causal chain that justifies the gold drop.

Omission

The Gulf bloc omits any mention of Iran's perspective or justification for the attacks, framing the escalation as a one-sided threat to stability. It also does not mention the possibility of de-escalation or diplomatic solutions.

PragmatismSkepticism
Iranian & allied press−0.20
Voice

Iran defends itself against US aggression, and global markets react to the inflationary consequences of this conflict.

Mechanisminversione di colpa

By including Iran's military actions as a legitimate response, the narrative shifts blame toward the US.

Omission

The Iranian bloc omits any mention of 'Gulf attacks' or the specific targets of Iranian military actions, which are highlighted in the Gulf bloc. It also omits the perspective that Iran's actions are seen as aggressive by other regional actors.

AlarmRevanchism

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Upd. 12:16 PM4 languages · 6 outlets
PreviousEconomy & MarketsNext
6 outlets|4 languages|2 min read
Friday, July 10, 2026

Gold slides as Gulf military strikes rekindle inflation and rate-hike bets

Spot gold heads for a weekly decline of more than 1% after Iranian forces attack US military infrastructure, pushing oil higher and reinforcing expectations that the Federal Reserve will keep interest rates elevated.

Spot gold fell to around $4,106 per ounce on Friday, leaving the metal on course for a weekly loss of roughly 1.6%. The decline accelerated after Iranian armed forces struck US military infrastructure in Gulf states on Thursday, a day after Washington targeted Iran’s southern coastal and eastern provinces. The renewed hostilities drove crude oil towards a weekly gain and unsettled bullion markets that had briefly stabilised earlier in the session.

The mechanism linking the military escalation to gold prices runs through energy costs and monetary policy. Attacks that threaten the Strait of Hormuz raise the probability of supply disruptions, feeding into higher oil prices and, in turn, stoking inflation fears. Minutes from the Federal Reserve’s June meeting, released this week, showed that several policymakers saw grounds for a rate increase before the committee opted to hold steady. Markets now price a 64% probability of a September rate hike, up from around 54% a week ago, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Because gold yields no interest, a higher-rate environment reduces its appeal relative to yield-bearing assets.

London-based HSBC cut its average gold price forecast for 2026, citing a hawkish shift in US monetary policy expectations and a stronger dollar. Sydney-based analysts noted that any sharp spike in oil could reignite rate fears to gold’s detriment, even as the metal attracts some haven buying on dips. In physical markets, gold traded at a wide discount in India as price volatility weighed on demand, while Chinese demand held steady; the People’s Bank of China reported its largest monthly increase in gold reserves in more than two and a half years in June. Poland’s central bank disclosed it holds 632.4 tonnes of gold.

The next factual milestones are the US consumer price index data due next week and testimony from Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh. A sustained rise in energy prices or a hawkish tone from the Chair could further test the $4,000 per ounce level that some traders view as psychological support.

Divergence — who tells it how
9%Low
3 blocs · positions from −0.20 to 0.00
CriticalFavorable
LATGLFIRN
Divergence between press blocs
Latin American press0.00neutral
Arab Gulf press0.00neutral
Iranian & allied press−0.20neutral
Latin American press0.00
Voice

Financial markets react to the combination of geopolitical conflict and restrictive monetary policy, without taking sides.

Mechanismtecnicismo economico

The gold drop is presented as a purely technical and economic phenomenon, detached from moral or political judgments.

Omission

The Latin American bloc omits the specific actors behind the conflict (US and Iran) and the nature of the military escalation, focusing only on the abstract 'combates en Oriente Medio'. This omission depoliticizes the story.

PragmatismDetachment
Arab Gulf press0.00
Voice

The Gulf region suffers the economic consequences of the military escalation between the US and Iran, and markets anticipate monetary tightening.

Mechanismcatenazione causale

It directly links regional security to Federal Reserve decisions, creating a causal chain that justifies the gold drop.

Omission

The Gulf bloc omits any mention of Iran's perspective or justification for the attacks, framing the escalation as a one-sided threat to stability. It also does not mention the possibility of de-escalation or diplomatic solutions.

PragmatismSkepticism
Iranian & allied press−0.20
Voice

Iran defends itself against US aggression, and global markets react to the inflationary consequences of this conflict.

Mechanisminversione di colpa

By including Iran's military actions as a legitimate response, the narrative shifts blame toward the US.

Omission

The Iranian bloc omits any mention of 'Gulf attacks' or the specific targets of Iranian military actions, which are highlighted in the Gulf bloc. It also omits the perspective that Iran's actions are seen as aggressive by other regional actors.

AlarmRevanchism

This story appeared in

6 outlets · 4 languages

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