Spot gold extends losses, falls over 3% to $4,336 per ounce as strong jobs data rattles markets

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Gold just had a very bad day. Spot prices cratered over 3% on June 5, landing around $4,336 per ounce and marking one of the steepest intraday drops the metal has seen in recent sessions.

What happened

The daily low hit $4,341.52, representing a decline of 2.96% before settling near $4,336. That single session extended a rough stretch for gold, pushing cumulative weekly losses to approximately 4.3%.

The catalyst was straightforward: stronger-than-expected US jobs data. A labor market that refuses to cool down gives the Federal Reserve exactly the cover it needs to keep interest rates elevated. And elevated rates are kryptonite for gold.

Gold doesn’t pay interest or dividends. When Treasury yields are generous, holding gold means forgoing real returns. Investors start doing the math, and the math doesn’t flatter the yellow metal.

A strengthening US dollar compounded the pain. Gold is priced in dollars globally, so when the greenback gains strength, it effectively makes gold more expensive for buyers using other currencies.

Rising oil prices added another layer of complexity. Traders apparently concluded that persistent inflation would give the Fed even more reason to hold rates steady, which circles back to the interest rate problem.

The bigger picture

Gold peaked near $5,600 per ounce earlier in 2026, driven by a combination of geopolitical anxiety, central bank buying, and inflation fears. At current levels around $4,336, gold has now shed roughly 22% from that peak.

The weekly loss of roughly 4.3% is notable because it suggests the selling pressure wasn’t just a one-day event. This was sustained liquidation across multiple sessions, which typically indicates institutional repositioning rather than retail panic.

What this means for investors

Gold still trades well above levels that would have seemed outlandish just two years ago. Geopolitical risks in the Middle East remain elevated. Central banks around the world have been accumulating gold reserves at a historic pace.

If the Fed maintains its current posture on rates, gold faces a sustained drag from opportunity cost. Every month that rates stay elevated is a month where bonds and money market funds offer returns that gold cannot match.

The drop from $5,600 to $4,336 represents a significant repricing, but corrections of 25% to 30% from peak are not uncommon in gold’s history.

The next catalysts to watch: inflation readings, Fed commentary, and any escalation or de-escalation in Middle East tensions.

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