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Gold Hits Two-Month Low As Dollar Strength Outweighs Iran Tensions

Published May 28, 2026
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Summary:
  • Gold fell to a two-month low as dollar strength and high real rates offset safe-haven demand tied to US-Iran tensions.
  • Inflation fears from potential oil price rises are keeping the Federal Reserve cautious, which supports the dollar and pressures gold.
  • Analysts say fear alone does not move gold prices and that the dollar and real interest rates are the key drivers to watch.

Gold is supposed to be what investors run to when the world feels shaky. So with tensions between the US and Iran climbing, gold should be rallying - but it just hit a two-month low instead.

Here's why the safe-haven trade is failing right now, and what's actually driving the gold price.

Why Iran Tensions Boost Inflation Fears

Tensions between the US and Iran have flared again after fresh US strikes on Iranian targets. Investors are worried any escalation pushes oil higher, which pushes inflation higher, which keeps the Federal Reserve - the US central bank that sets interest rates - in no rush to cut rates.

That last part is the piece most investors are missing.

Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what moves like this actually mean for your portfolio - in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

Why Gold Is Falling

Gold doesn't pay interest. It just sits there.

So when interest rates are high, owning gold means giving up the yield - the interest rate - you could earn on something safer like a Treasury bond.

Higher rates also pull the dollar up, and gold is priced in dollars. A stronger dollar makes gold more expensive for buyers overseas, which cools demand.

Put it together: inflation fears are doing more to push the dollar up than they're doing to push gold up. The safe-haven trade is losing to the rate trade.

Why Fear Alone Doesn't Move Gold

This is where a lot of investors get tripped up: scary headlines usually lift gold, but fear alone doesn't move the price - the dollar and real rates do.

Real rates are interest rates after subtracting inflation. When real rates rise, holding gold gets more expensive because safer assets pay more.

Think of it like a tug of war between safe-haven buyers on one side, and the dollar and bond yields on the other. Right now, the dollar is winning.

What To Watch

The next things to watch are oil prices and the Fed. If oil keeps climbing on Middle East tension, inflation expectations climb with it.

That keeps the Fed cautious and the dollar firm - which keeps a lid on gold even if the world looks scarier by the week.

Gold's story right now isn't about fear - it's about the dollar.

If you want this kind of read on the market every morning, join 350,000+ investors reading Market Briefs - you also get a free 45-minute investing course thrown in.

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