Commodities May 24, 2026 08:15 PM

Gold Rises as Hopes Grow for U.S.-Iran Deal; Dollar and Yields Retreat

Bullion and other precious metals climb after weekend developments rekindle expectations of a settlement and eased energy-supply fears

By Marcus Reed
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Gold prices climbed sharply in early Asian trading after weekend developments increased expectations of a U.S.-Iran peace framework. A weaker dollar and lower U.S. Treasury yields supported the rally in bullion, while silver and platinum also advanced. Reports suggested a potential agreement could extend the ceasefire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz to shipping, but disagreements over nuclear issues and comments that a naval blockade would remain left significant uncertainties.

Gold Rises as Hopes Grow for U.S.-Iran Deal; Dollar and Yields Retreat
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Key Points

  • Spot gold rose 1.5% to $4,577.12/oz by 19:49 ET (23:49 GMT); gold futures gained 1.2% to $4,612.24/oz.
  • Spot silver increased 3.8% to $78.3865/oz and spot platinum climbed 2% to $1,965.45/oz.
  • Reports that a U.S.-Iran framework could extend the ceasefire and reopen the Strait of Hormuz helped ease energy-driven inflation concerns, supporting precious metals.

Gold moved higher in early Asian markets on Monday as weekend developments revived investor hopes that a U.S.-Iran peace framework could be close. The move was accompanied by a notable decline in the dollar and U.S. Treasury yields, conditions that typically support bullion prices.

By 19:49 ET (23:49 GMT), spot gold had risen 1.5% to $4,577.12 an ounce. Gold futures increased 1.2% to $4,612.24 per ounce in the same session.

Other precious metals showed similar strength. Spot silver climbed 3.8% to $78.3865 per ounce, while spot platinum advanced 2% to $1,965.45 per ounce.


Weekend developments and market reaction

U.S. President Donald Trump said over the weekend that the framework for a peace deal with Iran was "largely negotiated." Media accounts described a potential pact that would extend the existing U.S.-Iran ceasefire and reopen shipping lanes through the Strait of Hormuz, a development that could help restore flows of oil to global markets.

However, subsequent comments from the president signaled no rush to finalize an agreement and indicated that a U.S. naval blockade of Iran would remain in place. Parallel reporting also emphasized that significant differences persisted between the two sides, especially regarding Iran's nuclear activities. Iranian officials have been reported to largely reject U.S. demands to hand over their holdings of enriched uranium.


Why markets moved

Markets had been under pressure from concerns that the Iran conflict would drive energy-related inflation higher. That inflation risk had been a major weight on gold in recent months because investors feared greater inflation could prompt additional interest rate increases from the Federal Reserve and other central banks. Those inflation fears had pushed global bond yields and the dollar higher, which in turn pressured metal prices. The renewed prospect of a deal appeared to ease some of those concerns and helped bullion recover.

Note: Information in this report reflects market moves and statements referenced above and does not introduce additional facts beyond those described.

Risks

  • U.S.-Iran disagreements remain, particularly over Tehran's nuclear activities, creating ongoing political and market uncertainty that could affect metals and energy sectors.
  • The president later indicated no rush to conclude a deal and said a U.S. naval blockade would remain, introducing the risk that a fully negotiated settlement may be delayed - impacting oil markets and inflation expectations.
  • Markets had been pressured by fears that energy-driven inflation could trigger more interest rate hikes from the Federal Reserve and other central banks; renewed volatility in yields and the dollar could reintroduce pressure on metal prices.

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