Chart of The Day – GOLD. XAU/USD lands on EMA200 as sell-off intensifies
- May 28, 2026
- Posted by: Today Markets
- Categories: Competitive research, Markets, Precious Metals, Technical Analysis
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The gold sell-off extends further (GOLD: -1.5%), bringing the precious metal futures down to its 200-days exponential moving average for the first time since March. This crucial technical retest is being driven by a potent combination of a surging safe-haven greenback and mounting pressure from a unified, hawkish US monetary policy.

GOLD has currently settled on its 200-day Exponential Moving Average (EMA), with the RSI hovering just a few points above the oversold threshold (>30). Notably, this recent wave of geopolitical volatility has been driven by lower trading volumes than those recorded in recent quarters. Source: xStation5
What’s driving GOLD today:
- US-Iran Military Escalation: The US downed four Iranian drones and destroyed a ground control station near the Strait of Hormuz, triggering a retaliatory Iranian strike on an American airbase in Kuwait. As peace talks stall, President Trump dismissed an Iran-Oman proposal to jointly restore and manage commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, threatening to “finish the job” unless Tehran complies.
- Lebanon Truce Near Collapse: Meanwhile, Israel drastically intensified its campaign against Hezbollah in southern Lebanon, striking 550 targets this week and declaring a new combat zone. This heavy fighting pushes a fragile April ceasefire to the brink of collapse and has displaced over 1.2 million people.
- Dollar Surges on Deadlock: Renewed Middle East tensions, backpinned by the exchange of hostilities in the region, have put an abrupt end to the recent surge in peace-deal optimism. This worsening geopolitical deadlock has reignited intense safe-haven demand, aggressively propelling the US dollar back to key levels last seen during the height of the conflict in mid-March.
- Hawkish Fed Stance Diminishes Gold’s Appeal: Aggressive rhetoric from Federal Reserve policymakers has severely dented the attractiveness of non-yielding precious metals. Fed Governor Lisa Cook declared a readiness to resume interest rate hikes if sticky inflation forces it, while Neel Kashkari noted that a solid labor market provides ample room for sharper policy tightening. This united front has directed capital into a strengthening US dollar, dramatically increasing the opportunity cost of holding gold over yield-bearing assets.

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