

Gold fell below $4,500 per ounce on Friday as both spot prices and New York futures dropped about 0.94 percent, extending a sharp pullback from this year’s record highs.
Summary
Early on May 22, gold slipped below $4,500 as spot and New York futures fell 0.94 percent, after the metal broke a key psychological level during New York trading.
In a widely cited follow up post, market watcher OnChainHutan said gold “slipped below $4,500, closing around $4,497.29 – $4,535.60 depending on the contract,” adding that the drop came as the US dollar hovered near a six week high and oil pushed above $97 per barrel.
That combination reinforced a familiar macro squeeze for bullion, since a stronger dollar makes gold more expensive for buyers in other currencies while higher energy costs fan inflation fears and push traders to price in the risk of tighter policy rather than imminent cuts.
According to OnChainHutan, futures markets are now “fueling bets the Fed may hike rates later this year,” with markets “pricing in a roughly 58 percent chance” of another move, a shift that directly undermines the appeal of a non yielding asset that earlier soared on expectations of aggressive easing.
The pullback lands just months after gold repeatedly punched through records above $4,900 per ounce, driven by central bank buying, geopolitical stress and wagers that Federal Reserve chair would have to slash borrowing costs into a slowing US economy.
In April, analysts surveyed by Investing.com still projected a median 2026 gold price of about $4,916 per ounce, underscoring how far sentiment has swung in a matter of sessions as spot now tests the lower edge of a $4,300 to $4,700 trading corridor highlighted in prior rate cut driven rallies.
Reactions on X captured the emotional whiplash, with one user noting that “gold drops 1 percent and suddenly everyone becomes a long term investor again,” while another user quipped that a “tiny red candle creates more panic than ten green ones create excitement.”
OnChainHutan argued that “gold pulling back while risk assets stay strong says a lot about current market sentiment,” pointing to an environment where equities and high beta plays have held up despite renewed Iran war risks, a dynamic also visible in recent crypto market outlook coverage of how traders fade geopolitical headlines.
Earlier this month, gold briefly fell back toward $4,500 per ounce on “heightened inflation fears” after a three percent intraday drop wiped out two weeks of gains, a move that foreshadowed today’s breach of the same level as investors reassessed whether bullion had outrun its macro narrative.
Analysts have warned that if the Fed leans more hawkish into the summer, bullion could spend extended time below $4,500 before any renewed push toward the $4,700 to $5,000 band that technical strategists previously mapped out once prices cleared $4,300 and $4,400.
For crypto traders, the move matters because this year’s record breaking gold surge above $4,900 per ounce ran alongside a powerful rally in Bitcoinm (BTC), as both assets traded like alternative macro hedges on US policy risk and Middle East tension.
If the market now believes the Federal Reserve is more likely to hike than cut, that same macro repricing could pressure high flying digital assets, just as it has started to bleed some air from bullion’s record run, something earlier crypto market outlook and ceasefire reports have highlighted whenever rate expectations flip.





