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    Gold price decline amid US–Iran talks: planning signals for mine projects

    April 21, 2026|

    Reviewed by Joe Ashwell

    Gold price decline amid US–Iran talks: planning signals for mine projects

    First reported on MINING.com

    30 Second Briefing

    Gold prices fell over 1% to about $4,763/oz in spot trading, with US futures near $4,800, extending last week’s decline as traders reacted to mixed signals on US-Iran ceasefire talks and the near-two-month Middle East war. Closure of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted energy flows, cut expectations of rapid monetary easing and driven bullion roughly 10% lower since late February, despite recent stabilisation as negotiations began. Market focus now turns to Federal Reserve chair nominee Kevin Warsh’s Senate hearing, with any hint of 2026 rate cuts seen as price-supportive.

    Technical Brief

    • Price action followed weekend statements from President Trump alternately downplaying and promoting prospects for a “great deal”.
    • Closure of the Strait of Hormuz has constrained global energy flows, feeding inflation expectations and policy uncertainty.
    • Analysts at OANDA flagged “tight range” trading conditions until clearer signals emerge from US–Iran ceasefire talks.
    • Kevin Warsh’s Senate Banking Committee hearing is now a key event risk for rate‑sensitive gold positions.
    • S&P Global expects central bank buying and geopolitical risk to establish a structural price floor above recent lows.

    Our Take

    With bullion down about 10% since the Middle East war began, this pullback contrasts with our recent Top 50 valuation piece where gold majors still added value at roughly $4,700/oz, suggesting equity investors are treating price weakness as cyclical rather than structural for large producers.

    The mention of manganese and aluminum alongside gold aligns with our March Global Mining Power Rankings, where investors favoured diversified exposure to copper, potash, lithium and aluminium; this mix implies portfolio hedging across precious and base/industrial metals during the US–Iran conflict.

    South32’s manganese output estimate of 1.25 million wet metric tonnes this year, cited via Visible Alpha, underscores how bulk and alloy metals are still being modelled on relatively stable fundamentals even as gold trades as a geopolitical risk barometer tied to US–Iran and Strait of Hormuz developments.

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    Prepared by collating external sources, AI-assisted tools, and Geomechanics.io’s proprietary mining database, then reviewed for technical accuracy & edited by our geotechnical team.

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