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Gold rises as oil weakens after US extends ceasefire with Iran

22 Apr 2026 - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}      

April 22 (Reuters) - Gold prices firmed on Wednesday as lower oil prices, following a U.S. extension of a ceasefire with Iran, eased ‌fears of an inflation spike and prolonged high interest rates.
Spot gold rose 0.9% to $4,755.11 per ounce, as of 0225 GMT, after falling to its lowest level since April 13 on Tuesday.
U.S. gold futures for ​June delivery gained 1.1% to $4,772.90.
U.S. President Donald Trump said he would indefinitely ​extend the ceasefire with Iran to allow for further peace talks, hours ⁠before it was set to expire.
Trump's announcement appeared to be unilateral, and it ​was not immediately clear whether Iran or the U.S. ally Israel would agree to ​extend the ceasefire, which began two weeks ago.
"With this ceasefire extension, the markets perceive a de-escalation in the crisis," said Marex analyst Edward Meir. "If the ceasefire ends and hostilities resume, we will see the ​dollar strengthen, oil and interest rates go up and that should pressure (gold) prices."
Stocks ​gained, dollar eased and oil prices turned lower following the ceasefire extension.
Higher crude prices can stoke ‌inflation ⁠by raising transportation and production costs. While gold is considered an inflation hedge, high interest rates make yield-bearing assets more attractive, weighing on the bullion's appeal.
"Price action remains at the mercy of Middle East ceasefire headlines and liquidity needs," Standard Chartered said in a ​note.
"While we note ​that the recent ⁠tick higher in prices has been fragile and is at risk of a short-term correction, we continue to expect (precious metals) prices ​to recover and gold in particular to retest record highs."
Meanwhile, ​Federal Reserve ⁠chief nominee Kevin Warsh said on Tuesday he had made no promises to Trump about cutting interest rates, as he tried to assure U.S. senators mulling his confirmation to lead ⁠the ​central bank that he would act independently of ​the White House while pursuing broad reforms.
Spot silver rose 1.5% to $77.84 per ounce, platinum gained 1.5% to $2,067.25, and ​palladium was up 1.8% at $1,560.31.