NEW YORK / Content Syndication Services / – Gold rose on Monday after touching its lowest level in more than a week, as lower oil prices reduced some inflation concern across bullion markets. Spot gold gained 0.5% to $4,182.39 an ounce by 1:50 p.m. ET. The metal had dropped on Friday to its weakest level since June 11. U.S. gold futures for August delivery settled 1% lower at $4,202.70 an ounce.

The rebound followed a drop in crude prices after Iran cited progress in talks with the United States. Brent crude fell nearly 2%, easing one pressure point for markets focused on fuel costs and inflation. Gold often moves with rate expectations because it pays no interest. Lower inflation pressure can support bullion when it reduces pressure for higher borrowing costs.
The move remained limited as the dollar held firm and traders assessed signals from the Federal Reserve. A stronger dollar can make gold more expensive for buyers using other currencies. Market pricing also showed increased expectations for a U.S. interest rate increase by December. That backdrop kept pressure on non-yielding assets, including gold.
Dollar strength caps bullion gains
Gold’s recovery came after a volatile week for precious metals and energy markets. The metal had gained earlier in June during periods of wider market stress. It later pulled back as investors weighed changing oil prices, U.S. rate expectations and demand for safe-haven assets. Silver, platinum and palladium also traded lower in the latest session, reflecting broader weakness across precious metals.
On Tuesday, the rebound faded as the dollar stayed near a one-year high. Spot gold fell 1.7% to $4,119.13 an ounce in early trading. U.S. gold futures for August delivery dropped 1.5% to $4,137.10. The declines showed that bullion remained sensitive to dollar moves and interest rate expectations after Monday’s recovery.
Rate expectations stay central
Traders continued to monitor U.S. inflation data for fresh direction on monetary policy. The personal consumption expenditures price index, a closely watched inflation measure, was due later in the week. Rate expectations matter for gold because higher yields can reduce demand for assets that do not provide income. The dollar’s strength added another headwind for international buyers.
The latest moves left gold above Friday’s one-week low but below recent highs reached earlier in June. Market attention stayed on oil prices, the dollar and U.S. rate pricing. Bullion remains one of the most watched assets during shifts in inflation expectations and geopolitical risk. For now, gold’s rebound has narrowed as investors track confirmed changes across commodities, currencies and rates.
