Gold edged higher on Wednesday but stayed pinned near the $4,500 level, as optimism over a possible US-Iran agreement eased some inflation and rate concerns. Spot gold (XAU/USD) rose 0.4% to $4,499.69 an ounce by 8:59 a.m. in Singapore, after earlier pressure took it near $4,480.

Market Snapshot
US gold futures for June delivery (GCM6) slipped 0.2% to $4,502.30. The move kept bullion close to its weakest level since March 30, with traders reluctant to chase a rebound before the Federal Reserve’s April policy meeting minutes, due later Wednesday.
Rate Pressure
The metal’s slide below $4,500 was driven by rising rate-hike expectations, which raised the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold. FXStreet cited CME FedWatch pricing showing a nearly 40% chance of a 25-basis-point Fed hike at the December meeting.
Event Details
Gold found some support after reports of progress in US-Iran talks tempered fears that inflation pressures would force policymakers to stay hawkish. Still, the rebound was limited. A Reuters poll cited in Wednesday’s market report showed most economists expected the Fed to avoid rate cuts this year.
Trading Reaction
The $4,480 to $4,500 zone remains the near-term focus for bullion traders. A sustained move below that area would confirm that rate expectations are overpowering haven demand. A hold above it would suggest buyers are defending the March support area.
Outlook
Traders will next watch the Fed minutes for inflation language, real-rate and dollar reactions after the release, and US-Iran headlines that could shift gold’s inflation and haven premium.



