WASHINGTON / Content Syndication Services / — Gold prices traded in a volatile range on Tuesday as investors braced for U.S. inflation data and monitored Middle East tensions, with bullion giving up early gains after touching a three-week high. Spot gold was down 0.6% at $4,705.99 an ounce, while June U.S. gold futures slipped 0.3% to $4,714.50. The move followed a sharp reversal a day earlier and highlighted how sensitive the market has become to inflation expectations, energy prices and the direction of the U.S. dollar.

The U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics is due to release the April Consumer Price Index at 8:30 a.m. Eastern time, a report that has become the main focus for metals traders. Economists expect headline consumer prices to rise 0.6% from March and 3.7% from a year earlier, after March posted a 0.9% monthly increase and a 3.3% annual gain. The inflation reading carries added weight because it feeds directly into expectations for how long U.S. interest rates may stay elevated.
Gold’s trading reflected those competing forces. Rising crude prices have strengthened demand for assets seen as a hedge against inflation, but they have also reinforced expectations that price pressures could remain firm, a dynamic that tends to support the dollar and keep borrowing costs high. Oil remained elevated as hopes for a durable ceasefire between the United States and Iran weakened, leaving investors focused on the risk that energy markets could continue adding to inflation at a time when the Federal Reserve is already confronting sticky price growth.
The uneven price action extended a pattern seen at the start of the week. On Monday, spot gold recovered from an intraday drop of more than 1% to finish modestly higher at $4,723.40 an ounce, underscoring how quickly sentiment has shifted between safe-haven demand and profit-taking. Tuesday’s retreat left bullion below that level but still close to recent highs, with investors avoiding large directional bets before one of the most closely watched pieces of U.S. economic data due this month.
Other precious metals also came under pressure as traders positioned ahead of the inflation report. Spot silver fell 1.3% to $84.98 an ounce, platinum dropped 2.3% to $2,083.47, and palladium was down 1.8% at $1,482.19. The broader decline across the metals complex pointed to a market-wide adjustment rather than a move isolated to gold, even as bullion continued to draw support from geopolitical uncertainty and its role as a store of value during periods of macroeconomic stress.
Inflation and rates in focus
The inflation backdrop has become more significant for metals markets since March consumer prices rose at the fastest monthly pace since June 2022, driven largely by energy. The March report showed the energy index rising 10.9% for the month and 12.5% from a year earlier, while core inflation, which excludes food and energy, increased 0.2% on the month and 2.6% on the year. That combination has kept attention fixed on whether rising fuel and household costs are continuing to feed through to broader consumer prices.
For bullion traders, Tuesday’s session captured the current balance in the market: support from haven demand on one side, and pressure from a firmer dollar and reduced expectations for lower U.S. borrowing costs on the other. Until the inflation figures are released, gold remains tied to those same cross-currents that have defined trading this week. The metal’s early climb and subsequent pullback reflected a market waiting for confirmation on whether inflation is still accelerating and how that may shape rate expectations in the sessions ahead.
