
As of June 30, 2026, the precious metals market exhibited notable internal divergence and choppy trading. Spot gold was trading near $4,006.70 per ounce heading into the North American cash-market close, down 0.22% on the session. Despite attempting to recover the $4,064.10 high during intraday trading, gold ultimately remained capped by a strong U.S. dollar and climbing bond yields. Spot silver, by contrast, showed greater resilience, closing at $58.470 per ounce, up 0.50%, with an intraday trading range of $56.53 to $60.55.
The core logic behind this divergence lies in the shift in macro pricing power. Market focus has pivoted decisively from Middle East geopolitical risks to the Federal Reserve’s tightening expectations. As shipping through the Strait of Hormuz gradually recovered to near pre-conflict levels by late June, the panic premium tied to potential crude supply disruptions subsided, and the “insurance bid” that had accumulated in gold on safe-haven sentiment likewise narrowed. Replacing that narrative is the hawkish dot-plot unveiled after the June 17 FOMC meeting, which revised the median 2026 federal funds rate path upward to 3.8% and also raised core PCE inflation projections.
Fresh labor-market data further reinforced these concerns. Tuesday’s May JOLTS report showed job openings unexpectedly rising to 7.594 million, significantly exceeding market expectations of 7.3 million, signaling that the labor market remains tight. This data directly pushed the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.469% by the New York close, while the U.S. dollar index (DXY) held steady near 101.37. For non-yielding gold, the sharp rise in carrying costs constitutes the primary headwind, explaining why the metal encountered selling pressure near the $4,064 rebound level.
Silver’s relative strength, on the other hand, stems from its dual nature and a more favorable supply-demand profile. On one side, a decline in the gold-silver ratio provided silver with catch-up momentum. On the other, although crude prices showed no sharp swings amid the complex Iran situation (with WTI crude at $70.03/bbl), the elevated energy cost floor offered some support to silver prices through industrial demand expectations.
Looking ahead, the precious metals market remains caught in a tug-of-war between “lingering geopolitical risk” and “intensifying tightening expectations.” With the Thursday release of the June nonfarm payrolls report and Fed Chair Warsh’s speech on the horizon, market liquidity is thinning due to the upcoming U.S. holiday, suggesting that gold’s seesaw battle around the $4,000 level may persist—and any directional move could be amplified by thinner-than-usual liquidity.
For gold to break out of its current consolidation range, clear cooling signals from the labor market are needed to break the positive feedback loop between yields and the dollar. Meanwhile, silver warrants close attention to whether oil prices can remain stable amid the “sensitive and complex” situation in the Strait of Hormuz, as this bears directly on the sustainability of its inflation-hedging demand.
