Gold Stabilizes After Six-Day Decline

2026-03-19 00:36 By Kyrie Dichosa 1 min. read

Gold prices steadied around $4,830 per ounce on Thursday after a sixth straight decline, the longest losing streak since late 2024, as the Federal Reserve’s hawkish hold outweighed geopolitical risks.

The Fed kept rates unchanged and signaled just one cut this year, with Jerome Powell stressing that easing hinges on clearer progress in curbing inflation.

Officials also highlighted rising uncertainty from the Middle East conflict, warning that higher energy prices could fuel inflation.

Meanwhile, Iran launched missile strikes on a Qatari site housing the world’s largest LNG facility, escalating tensions after an Israeli attack on Iran’s South Pars gas field.

While this supported safe-haven demand, it also pushed oil prices higher.

Gold remains up about 12% year-to-date, but momentum has weakened as expectations for the scale of rate cuts have diminished and some investors sold holdings to meet margin calls elsewhere.



News Stream
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Gold dropped to around $4,710 per ounce on Thursday, declining for the seventh session to hit a nearly six-week low, as the Federal Reserve’s hawkish outlook weighed on its non-yielding appeal. The Fed kept interest rates unchanged, as expected, saying the uncertain economic impact of the conflict involving Iran and highlighting persistent upside risks to inflation. Policymakers signaled that rate cuts will remain on hold until there is clearer evidence that price pressures are easing, although they still project one reduction this year. Meanwhile, geopolitical tensions escalated after Iran launched missile strikes on a site in Qatar housing the world’s largest LNG facility, following an Israeli attack on Iran’s South Pars gas field. While this supported safe-haven demand, it also pushed oil prices higher. Gold remains up about 12% year-to-date, but momentum has weakened as rate cut expectations fade and some investors sell to meet margin calls.
2026-03-19
Gold Stabilizes After Six-Day Decline
Gold prices steadied around $4,830 per ounce on Thursday after a sixth straight decline, the longest losing streak since late 2024, as the Federal Reserve’s hawkish hold outweighed geopolitical risks. The Fed kept rates unchanged and signaled just one cut this year, with Jerome Powell stressing that easing hinges on clearer progress in curbing inflation. Officials also highlighted rising uncertainty from the Middle East conflict, warning that higher energy prices could fuel inflation. Meanwhile, Iran launched missile strikes on a Qatari site housing the world’s largest LNG facility, escalating tensions after an Israeli attack on Iran’s South Pars gas field. While this supported safe-haven demand, it also pushed oil prices higher. Gold remains up about 12% year-to-date, but momentum has weakened as expectations for the scale of rate cuts have diminished and some investors sold holdings to meet margin calls elsewhere.
2026-03-19