A hotter-than-expected US inflation report on Tuesday halted gold’s advance, forcing a market-wide recalibration of Federal Reserve policy expectations.
A hotter-than-expected US inflation report on Tuesday halted gold’s advance, forcing a market-wide recalibration of Federal Reserve policy expectations.

Gold prices reversed their recent gains on Tuesday after US inflation data for April came in firm, raising investor concerns that the Federal Reserve will need to keep interest rates higher for longer. The move complicates a market already wrestling with significant geopolitical risks.
“Core inflation was already perking up before the war’s energy shock,” said Ilya Spivak, Head of Global Macro at tastylive, noting that goods prices have been firming for months while services inflation has been posting its strongest monthly gains since mid-2025.
The April Consumer Price Index (CPI) showed headline inflation rising 3.7 percent year-on-year, in line with consensus estimates but confirming a trend of persistent price pressures. The reaction across asset classes was immediate and divergent. While gold pulled back from recent highs, Treasury yields pushed sharply higher, and the US dollar consolidated its gains. In contrast, silver surged on a mix of safe-haven and industrial demand.
The data crystallizes the difficult trade-off facing the Federal Reserve. With Bank of America now forecasting no rate reductions in 2026 and JPMorgan warning that annual inflation will stay above 3 percent until February 2027, the prospect of monetary easing is fading. This reality check threatens to undermine a months-long, narrow rally in equities and forces a repricing of risk across the board.
In a stark divergence from gold, silver rallied nearly 7 percent to settle at $85.89 an ounce, its highest level in two months. The move highlights the metal’s dual identity as both a monetary and industrial asset. The gold-to-silver ratio subsequently dropped to 55, a clear signal of silver’s outperformance.
Driving the surge is a combination of heightened geopolitical risk and structural demand. The collapse of Washington-Tehran nuclear talks has turned the Strait of Hormuz into a flashpoint, with shipping traffic collapsing to 5 percent of normal capacity and sending Brent crude above $104 a barrel. This has amplified safe-haven flows into precious metals, with silver benefiting disproportionately. At the same time, a growing supply deficit, projected by the Silver Institute to hit 46 million ounces in 2026, is being exacerbated by industrial demand from the artificial intelligence infrastructure boom.
The CPI report lands at a precarious moment for the broader equity market. While the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100 have set record highs, the rally has been exceptionally narrow. According to analysis from tastylive, the semiconductor sector (SMH ETF) is up more than 54 percent year-to-date, almost single-handedly lifting the benchmarks.
Beneath the surface, the picture is far weaker. The equal-weighted S&P 500 (RSP) remains below its February highs, and the equal-weighted Nasdaq 100 (QQEW) is up just 2.2 percent for the year. The persistent inflation revealed in the CPI data is a direct threat to this fragile setup. These same headwinds squeeze consumers and threaten to delay the AI data center buildout that has fueled the semiconductor boom, with about 40 percent of projects slated for 2026 now expected to slip into 2027 or later.
As markets digest the inflation print, the focus shifts to the Federal Reserve's next move. The central bank is now caught between tackling persistent inflation and avoiding a stall in economic activity. With a Trump-Xi summit also scheduled for later in the week, investors are braced for further volatility as they navigate the cross-currents of economic data and geopolitical uncertainty.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.