Gold Futures Market Briefing — 2026-06-24
Gold futures are feeling the heat from Federal Reserve rate hike expectations and a stronger dollar. As of June 22, the price sat at $4,202 an ounce, struggling to push past the $4,200 technical resistance level.
Gold Futures Market Briefing — 2026-06-24
Current Gold Prices and Key Figures
Current Gold Futures Price:
- As of June 22: $4,202.02/oz
- Gold has recorded three consecutive weeks of decline.
- It is down approximately 13% from its all-time high at the start of the year.

Market Influencing Factors and News Analysis
1. Federal Reserve Rate Hike Expectations Gold prices are being influenced by a stronger dollar driven by expectations of Federal Reserve rate hikes. As of June 23, gold fell more than 2% due to dollar strength, and the possibility of rate hikes continues to pressure gold prices.

2. Failure to Break Technical Resistance Gold prices are stabilizing around the major resistance level of $4,200 per ounce. This level is acting as a strong resistance point in the spot gold market.
3. Downward Adjustment of Expert Forecasts Deutsche Bank has lowered its gold price forecast by up to 22%, evaluating that investment demand is shrinking due to uncertainty regarding U.S. interest rate policies.
Technical Chart Analysis and Trading Scenarios
Key Technical Levels:
- Resistance: $4,200/oz (Currently under pressure)
- Near-term Support: $4,310–$4,320 range
Technical Outlook: Fibonacci retracement calculations provide a mathematical support/resistance framework for the decline from the recent all-time high of $5,586 to the current level.
In the short term, gold prices are struggling to break above the $4,200 resistance level, and upcoming interest rate policy announcements and economic indicators are expected to determine the future direction.
Macro Context
1. Weak ETF Capital Flows Morgan Stanley analysts pointed out that without strong ETF inflows, gold will struggle to reach its bullish target of $5,200 per ounce in the second half of 2026. However, central bank gold purchases are likely to continue.
2. Sustained Gold Accumulation by Central Banks Gold accumulation by central banks has more than doubled over the past four years, with 89% of central banks expecting the share of gold in their global foreign exchange reserves to continue rising over the next 12 months.
3. U.S. Interest Rate Policy Uncertainty Rising market uncertainty over the Federal Reserve's rate path is having conflicting effects on safe-haven demand and gold prices. Future economic indicators and FOMC statements are expected to dictate the market's direction.
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