- The spot gold (GOLD) price showed a moderate rebound during Friday's Asian trading session, fluctuating around $4512.79 per ounce. Market participants are cautiously assessing the latest marginal developments in Middle Eastern geopolitics, particularly regarding the draft of a possible extension of the ceasefire agreement between the United States and Iran. They are also re-evaluating the Federal Reserve's (Fed) hawkish monetary policy stance.
- The U.S. inflation indicator for April recorded its fastest growth in nearly three years, largely reflecting the systemic transmission of energy price increases to the real economy due to previous geopolitical conflicts. With re-inflation pressures still significant, St. Louis Fed President Mussailem issued a clear warning that if core inflation does not return to a slowing trajectory within the next six months, the possibility of resuming rate hikes cannot be ruled out. This statement completely dampened the market's short-term easing expectations.
- Against the backdrop of high benchmark interest rates and intertwined geopolitical risks, the local demand for physical assets has shown remarkable resilience. According to the latest data disclosed by the Hong Kong Census and Statistics Department, China's net gold imports via Hong Kong in April surged by 81.2% compared to the previous month. This strong cross-regional inflow of physical capital has provided solid bottom support for precious metal prices, which are in a valuation correction phase.
Reassessment of Geopolitical Premium and Marginal Easing
According to information from informed sources, the United States and Iran have reached a draft agreement to extend the ceasefire and restore free navigation in the Strait of Hormuz. Although the agreement has not yet received formal approval from U.S. President Trump, and Iranian official media have publicly stated that the agreement is not yet finalized, the improved security expectations for this critical channel have led to a marginal decline in the short-term risk premium in the international commodity market.
Spot gold prices corrected to a two-month low in the previous trading day, then rebounded on the systemic push from the ceasefire extension draft news. Analysts pointed out that the phased easing of geopolitical tensions usually suppresses non-interest-bearing safe-haven assets. However, due to the high policy uncertainty of the agreement, market funds did not choose to exit on a large scale at key points but maintained a relatively cautious wait-and-see stance.
Re-inflation Concerns and Reassessment of Fed Rate Outlook
The pressure on the macroeconomic level mainly comes from the continuously pressured inflation path. The unexpected acceleration of U.S. core inflation data in April has completely solidified the systemic predictions of mainstream Wall Street economists that the Fed, in the context of the lagging effects of energy costs, will maintain the benchmark interest rate at its current restrictive level at least until next year.
The latest policy statements from Fed officials further reinforced this tightening feature. St. Louis Fed President Mussailem clearly outlined the trigger conditions for policy variables, stating that if inflation remains high, policy rates may need to rise further. Although New York Fed President Williams tried to balance expectations, believing that the current monetary policy is in the right place and expecting short-term inflation pressures to ease later this year, the long-cycle characteristics of the tightening cycle have become the core logic of current cross-asset pricing.
Expansion of Physical Demand Offsets High Nominal Interest Rates
While the financial derivatives market is under pressure due to rate hike expectations, the physical gold premium in the Asia-Pacific region is showing significant structural resilience. In April, China's net gold imports via Hong Kong surged by 81.2% month-on-month. This high-frequency trade data reflects that the demand for hard assets in major consumer countries remains at a historical high amid macro exchange rate fluctuations and geopolitical uncertainties.
The tight supply-demand balance in the physical chain has largely offset the valuation pressure on the gold market caused by rising nominal yields on U.S. Treasuries. Driven by the dual forces of global central bank accumulation and private physical investment demand, the effectiveness of gold as a systemic risk hedging tool has not been weakened by the high-interest-rate environment. Instead, it has shown an increase in asset allocation premium.
Overall Linkage of Precious Metals Sector and Position Adjustment
Driven by the stabilization of spot gold prices, the global precious metals sector as a whole has shown a narrow-range oscillating upward linkage feature. Spot silver (XAGUSD) prices rose moderately by 0.7% to $76.17 per ounce. Despite being constrained by fluctuations in industrial demand expectations, it still demonstrated systemic resilience in following the upward trend; platinum and palladium also recorded intraday gains of 0.2% and 0.9%, respectively.
Currently, global macro hedge funds are in a critical window of position structure adjustment. On one hand, long funds are reducing commodity volatility positions based on the probability of Middle Eastern energy supply chain restoration. On the other hand, the swap market's pricing of the Fed's future policy path remains highly volatile. If core inflation data continues to rebound in the future, the long pricing of the precious metals market may face a phased reassessment, and the overall market liquidity flow between commodities and fixed-income assets will become more systematic.