Palladium (XPDUSD) is down 2.03% at Jun 18 05:10(ET), now at $1288.45, with a 7-day up of 1.72%.

The recent downturn in palladium prices is primarily attributed to a major hawkish shift in U.S. Federal Reserve monetary policy expectations, which has reinvigorated the U.S. dollar and pushed global bond yields higher. While the Federal Open Market Committee maintained the benchmark interest rate at its June meeting, the updated Summary of Economic Projections delivered a hawkish surprise to the markets. The central bank’s new dot plot revealed that a majority of policymakers now anticipate at least one additional rate hike before the end of the year, raising the median year-end interest rate projection. Concurrently, the Fed revised its end-of-year inflation outlook higher, indicating that monetary policy will remain restrictive for longer. This hawkish tilt drove a sharp appreciation in the U.S. dollar and elevated Treasury yields, reducing the appeal of non-yielding commodities and triggering a broad liquidation across the precious and industrial metals complexes.
In addition to monetary headwinds, an easing of the geopolitical risk premium has contributed to the price correction. The signing of a preliminary peace agreement between the United States and Iran, aimed at resolving the Middle East conflict and reopening the critical Strait of Hormuz, has successfully defused a key market concern. While the prospect of normalized shipping routes and lower energy prices initially supported global industrial sentiment, the actualization of the accord prompted a substantial unwinding of defensive, safe-haven positioning. As systemic risk subsided, speculative capital flowed out of the metals sector, leaving palladium highly vulnerable to macro-driven profit-taking.
Furthermore, long-term structural supply-demand dynamics continue to cap palladium’s upside. Unlike gold and silver, which are highly sensitive to financial flows, palladium remains heavily dependent on fabrication demand within the automotive sector, where it is utilized in catalytic converters for gasoline engines. The platinum-group metals market continues to digest forecasts of a structural transition, with analysts expecting the palladium market’s current deficit to shift to a surplus in the coming years due to accelerating substitution by cheaper platinum and the broader secular transition toward battery-electric vehicles. In the absence of a tight physical market or a supportive interest rate environment, these structural headwinds, combined with a stronger dollar and hawkish rate expectations, have intensified near-term selling pressure on the metal.
Technically, Palladium (XPDUSD) shows a MACD (12,26,9) value of 19.459, indicating a neutral signal. The RSI at 43.305 suggests neutral condition and the Williams %R at 49.064 suggests neutral condition. Please monitor closely.

This article may include AI-generated content that is human-reviewed, which is for reference and general information purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
