XAUUSD Weekly Intel #7: The $53 Drop and the Rebound — Gold at $4,520, Iran Talks on Knife's Edge, NFP Friday Holds the Key

XAUUSD Weekly Intel #7: The $53 Drop and the Rebound — Gold at $4,520, Iran Talks on Knife's Edge, NFP Friday Holds the Key

Gold shed $53 on June 1 as the S&P hit record highs on Iran deal optimism, then bounced back toward $4,520 as Tehran suspended US talks. ISM Manufacturing PMI hit 54.0 (highest since May 2022), locking in the 'higher for longer' case. This mid-week update maps the revised channel levels, the ISM impact on Fed expectations, and the JOLTS-ADP-NFP sequence that will decide whether gold breaks to $4,620 or retests the 200-day MA at $4,366.

XAUUSD Weekly Gold Trading Intelligence
2026/6/2 · 19:14
購読 2 件 · コンテンツ 7 件
Mid-week update — Tuesday June 2, 2026
Gold shed $53 in a single session on June 1, then clawed back more than half those losses in early Tuesday trading. The move exposed the two competing forces that will define the rest of this week: Iran deal optimism pulling gold lower via equity rallies and dollar firming, and geopolitical fragility pulling it back up the moment talks look like they might break down. Neither side has won yet. With JOLTS due today (10 a.m. ET), ADP Wednesday, jobless claims Thursday, and NFP Friday, the next four data prints will either confirm the hawkish "higher for longer" case or give bulls a window to reclaim $4,570+.

What changed since Issue #6

Issue #6 (published June 1 pre-market) mapped the week from a gold price of $4,538.90. By Monday's close the picture had shifted materially on two fronts.
ISM Manufacturing PMI (May): Released June 1 at 54.0, the highest reading since May 2022 and 1.3 points above April's 52.7. 1 New Orders came in at 56.8, Production at 54.3. The Prices Index, still scorching at 82.1%, dropped 2.5 points from April's 84.6 — a slight easing in input inflation, but 42% of respondents cited the Iran war as a direct cost driver. Employment stayed in contraction at 48.6. A strong manufacturing beat, combined with persistent price pressure, reinforced the "higher for longer" Fed narrative and strengthened the dollar, putting immediate pressure on gold.
チャートを読み込んでいます…
June 1 gold session: Spot gold closed at $4,495.80, down $53.48 (–1.18%) — one of the sharpest single-session moves in recent weeks. 2 The catalyst was dual: S&P 500 hit a record close at 7,599.96, reducing safe-haven demand, while Trump's ambiguous comments about Iran negotiations — first signaling indifference to talks, then saying negotiations were proceeding "at a rapid pace" — whipsawed oil and diverted flows away from gold. The DXY edged up to 99.19 (+0.28%). Comex gold closed May 1.17% lower at $4,560.50, its third consecutive monthly decline. 3
Tuesday morning recovery: In early European trading on June 2, gold futures bounced back to $4,562 (+1.2% from Monday close), with spot around $4,520. 4 The reason: Iranian state media reported that Tehran suspended communications with Washington over Israel's actions in Lebanon, directly contradicting Trump's partial ceasefire announcement on Israel-Hezbollah. 5 The uncertainty about whether the ceasefire holds is doing exactly what geopolitical ambiguity tends to do: keeping a floor under gold.
"Gold continues to take its cues from the oil market given crude's influence on inflation expectations and, by extension, interest rates, bond yields and the dollar." — Saxo Bank analysts, June 2, 2026 4

Current market snapshot (as of Tuesday June 2 pre-US open)

統計カードを読み込んでいます…
Note: Spot and futures prices are intraday estimates from multiple sources and subject to further movement. DXY from Mitrade EU session data. 6

Technical picture: where the levels now sit

Gold's Tuesday recovery from $4,495 back toward $4,520 puts it between two technically meaningful zones.
XAUUSD H4 technical analysis June 2, 2026 — Hammer near lower Bollinger Band, ascending channel structure
H4 chart showing Hammer reversal near lower Bollinger Band, with ascending channel intact — target resistance $4,570 5
On the downside, $4,445 is the immediate support that bulls need to hold — DailyForex noted price touched close to this level early Tuesday before recovering. 7 Below that, $4,410 and then $4,340–$4,366 (the May 28 intraday low and 200-day MA zone) represent deeper support. A clean break below $4,410 opens a retest of the 200-day MA — a structure gold held decisively in late May but would damage confidence if revisited.
On the upside, $4,530 capped Monday's high. Beyond that, $4,570 is the H4 Bollinger upper and the resistance level RoboForex's primary setup targets after the Hammer candle formation near the lower band. 5 A sustained close above $4,580 would reopen the path to $4,620–$4,640 — the resistance band that Issue #6 identified as the "real" breakout level for the bull scenario.
The H4 ascending channel noted in Issue #6 appears technically intact. The Monday sell-off was sharp but corrective in structure, not a breakdown. The question is whether bulls can hold $4,481 — the bull/bear pivot that has been the channel floor since late May — as this week's data lands.

The four data prints that decide the week

The macro calendar for the rest of this week is dense. Each data point shifts the "higher for longer" probability, and with it the dollar/yield equation that feeds directly into gold.
DateEventConsensusPriorGold impact logic
Tue Jun 2 (10am ET)JOLTS April job openings6.82–6.89M6.87MBeat → hawkish, USD up, gold headwind; miss → rate-cut hopes, gold support
Wed Jun 3 (8:15am ET)ADP May employment+120K+109KBeat → confirms labor strength, yields up
Thu Jun 4 (8:30am ET)Initial jobless claims week ended May 30~215K215KLow claims → tight labor market, hawkish
Fri Jun 5 (8:30am ET)NFP May+85–93K / unemp 4.3%+115K / 4.3%Decisive catalyst: soft print = rate-cut window = gold rally
The NFP print on Friday carries the most weight. 8 Bloomberg economists surveyed forecast +85K payrolls and 4.3% unemployment — the third consecutive positive print. A print below 70K would sharply revive rate-cut expectations and likely push gold back toward $4,620+. A print above 120K would validate the ISM manufacturing signal, push yields higher, and put $4,445 support under real pressure.
One structural context worth flagging: average hourly earnings rose just 3.6% year over year in April against 3.8% CPI inflation — real wages are still negative. 9 The Fed is watching wages closely. If NFP comes in soft but average hourly earnings tick up, the Fed's inflation-versus-employment calculus stays complicated.

Iran: the variable the data calendar can't price

Geopolitics is running on a parallel track to the data calendar. Trump's announcement of a partial ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah cut oil prices from their June 1 spike high and pulled safe-haven flows temporarily. But Iranian state media's statement that Tehran has suspended communications with Washington — citing Israel's continued actions in Lebanon — reintroduced uncertainty immediately. 5
The Strait of Hormuz remains a pressure point. Trump suggested a deal to reopen the Strait could come "next week" — which would be a significant deflationary event for oil prices and, by extension, would reduce one of the key inflation drivers currently keeping Fed rate-cut expectations suppressed. If Brent falls from $91–$95 back toward $85, the yield-inflation-dollar complex shifts meaningfully for gold. That's the bull catalyst that doesn't require weak labor data.
ISM panelists flagged the Iran conflict in 42% of May responses, with 57% citing pricing volatility as a direct issue. 1 If the geopolitical situation stabilizes, the Prices Index — already down 2.5 points — could ease further, which would feed through to a more dovish Fed tone.

Updated trade setup for the rest of the week

Bull setup (requires: soft labor data and/or Iran de-escalation)
  • Entry zone: $4,481–$4,510 (channel floor, confirmed hold)
  • Trigger: hold above $4,481 + soft JOLTS/ADP/NFP print or positive Iran ceasefire confirmation
  • First target: $4,570–$4,580
  • Extended target: $4,620–$4,650
  • Invalidation: clean close below $4,445 on elevated volume
Bear setup (requires: strong labor data or Iran escalation re-ignites oil/inflation)
  • Entry zone: $4,565–$4,580 (resistance retest, no follow-through)
  • Trigger: ISM Services beat Wednesday + NFP >120K + yields back above 4.50%
  • First target: $4,445
  • Extended target: $4,366–$4,340 (200-day MA zone, channel breakdown level)
  • Invalidation: close above $4,605
No-trade conditions: Any open print within $4,481–$4,530 without a data catalyst or Iran headline. Mid-range entries here lack asymmetry and carry outsized news risk this week.

Risk warnings

  • News flash risk is highest this week: Five macro events plus ongoing Iran headline risk make intraday volatility unpredictable. Entries without stops and defined invalidation levels are inadvisable.
  • ISM Manufacturing beat changes the week's framing: The ISM PMI of 54.0 shifts the prior week's "soft economy = rate cuts" narrative. Gold is no longer trading in a clear "Fed-pivot-friendly" environment. Adjust your base case accordingly.
  • Iran ceasefire claims are contradictory: Long positions on "geopolitical safe-haven" need to be sized for the possibility that a confirmed Strait of Hormuz deal removes the floor quickly.
  • Oil/gold correlation is tighter than usual: Elevated Brent prices are feeding inflation expectations, which are feeding the "no cuts" trade. Watch Brent — not just gold — for directional signals this week.
All levels are derived from technical analysis and publicly available market data. This is not financial advice. Every trade requires a pre-defined invalidation level. Probabilities are estimates, not certainties. Confirmed data is distinguished from estimates throughout.

このコンテンツについて、さらに観点や背景を補足しましょう。

  • ログインするとコメントできます。