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Gold Breaks Lower as Fed Repricing Undercuts Safe-Haven Demand | Investing.com

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March 3, 2026
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is doing the one thing nobody expected during an active shooting war in the Middle East: collapsing. The precious metal plunged more than 5% on Tuesday to trade near $5,031, after peaking at an intraday high of $5,419.32 just 24 hours earlier. April futures opened at $5,205 per ounce, already down 2% from Monday closing price of $5,311.60, and continued to hemorrhage throughout the European and early U.S. sessions, crashing through $5,200, $5,100, and now threatening the psychologically critical $5,000 level. Silver followed the same script with even more violence, plunging over 10% from Monday $90 per ounce spike to trade around $79.52 on Tuesday.

The move is counterintuitive on the surface. A war is raging. The Strait of Hormuz is blockaded. Iran is launching drones at the U.S. embassy in Riyadh. Oil has surged 14% in two days. And yet gold, the oldest safe-haven asset on the planet, is in freefall. Understanding why requires looking beyond the geopolitical headlines and into the mechanics of dollar dominance, inflation repricing, and forced liquidation.

Monday price action was textbook panic-buying. When markets opened after the weekend strikes that killed Iran Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, the spot price rocketed from approximately $5,100 to an intraday high of $5,419.32, a gain of more than 6% in a single session. U.S. gold futures hit $5,397.40, the highest reading since the all-time high of $5,594.82 set on January 29, 2026. For a few hours, it looked like gold was going to make a run at that record.

But profit-taking set in by Monday afternoon, pulling the spot price back to roughly $5,340 before stabilizing around $5,384 by the close. That moderate correction was a warning sign. When an asset fails to hold gains during the peak of a fear-driven bid, the marginal buyer is already exhausted. Tuesday confirmed the suspicion: the entire Monday rally has been erased and then some, with prices now trading $400 below the session high.

The pattern is not unusual for gold during sudden geopolitical shocks. The initial flight-to-safety spike tends to be sharp and emotionally driven. The reversal, equally sharp, comes when structural forces like dollar strength, yield movements, and position liquidation overwhelm the headline-driven demand. That is exactly what is happening now.

The surged 1.07% to 99.42 on Tuesday, its strongest level in a month. Over the past five days, the dollar has gained 1.7%. For gold, which is priced in dollars globally, a rising greenback is a direct headwind: it makes the metal more expensive for every non-U.S. buyer on the planet, compressing international demand precisely when the fear bid should be at its strongest.

Mizuho strategists captured the dynamic perfectly: a world that had spent the past year enthusiastically positioning for de-dollarization is discovering that when genuine stress arrives, everything still settles in dollars, funds in dollars, hedges in dollars, and buys energy in dollars. The U.S. being a net energy exporter only amplifies the greenback relative advantage during an oil-supply shock. Capital is flowing into the dollar not because people suddenly love it, but because in a crisis, there is no alternative for liquidity.

Gold often moves inversely to the dollar, and Tuesday session is a brutal illustration. The dollar is winning the safe-haven competition outright, leaving gold, despite the war, despite the inflation fears, despite everything, deep in the red.

The entire bull case for gold in 2026 was built on expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts. Lower rates reduce the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset like gold, making it relatively more attractive. For months, the market had been pricing in at least two quarter-point cuts this year, and gold 81% gain over the past 12 months reflected that dovish expectation.

That pricing is being ripped apart in real time. Monday ISM Manufacturing Prices Paid data for February came in scorching hot at 70.5, obliterating the consensus estimate of 59.5 and the prior reading of 59.0. Factory-level input costs are accelerating at the fastest pace in months, and that was before the full impact of $85 Brent crude and a 70% two-day surge in European natural-gas prices flows through the supply chain.

The CME FedWatch tool now shows a 53.5% probability that the Fed holds rates steady at the June meeting, up sharply from 42.7% on Friday. The odds of two or more quarter-point cuts this year have collapsed to 57% from 79%. Some analysts are going further, arguing that if crude oil remains elevated for weeks, as President Trump four-to-five-week conflict timeline suggests, the Fed may actually be forced to consider rate hikes rather than cuts. The dollar current rally reflects precisely this repricing.

For gold, this is the worst possible macro shift. A Fed that is on hold, or worse, tilting hawkish, removes the single most important structural pillar supporting prices above $5,000. Professional allocators compare yields across asset classes. If Treasury yields keep climbing (the 10-year hit 4.095% on Tuesday, up nearly 15 basis points from Friday 3.95% close) and rate-cut expectations continue to evaporate, institutional money will rotate out of gold and into fixed income for a better risk-adjusted return. Tuesday selloff may be the early stages of exactly that rotation.

There is a mechanical force at work that has nothing to do with gold fundamentals or the war. With the crashing 1,100 points, the S&P 500 down 2%, the Nasdaq off 2.2%, and the collapsing 3.34%, equity margin calls are cascading across the market. When brokerages demand additional collateral from leveraged equity positions, the fastest way to raise cash is to sell your most profitable holdings. Gold, up 81% over the past year and roughly 20% year-to-date even after Tuesday selloff, is a prime liquidation candidate.

This dynamic explains why gold and are both falling during an active military conflict with soaring oil prices and genuine geopolitical uncertainty. It is not that the safe-haven thesis is permanently broken; it is that forced selling from equity margin calls is temporarily overwhelming the fear-driven bid. Silver 10%-plus collapse from $90 to $79.52, far more severe than gold percentage decline, confirms the liquidation hypothesis, since silver is the more speculative, thinly-traded metal and therefore more vulnerable to forced unwinds.

The four-hour chart shows XAU/USD has been trading within a well-defined Rising Channel pattern. Monday spike carried prices right to the upper boundary of that channel near $5,400, where the rally was rejected with textbook precision. The subsequent selloff has now dragged gold below the 20-period Exponential Moving Average at $5,280 and is threatening the lower boundary of the channel near $5,065.

The 14-period Relative Strength Index has plummeted from above 80, deep overbought territory, to approximately 49, confirming that bullish momentum has completely evaporated. The RSI is now neutral, offering no directional bias.

Below there, the minor Fibonacci retracement at $5,143 and the more significant retracement level at $5,002 stand as support. If $5,000 fails, and it is only about $30 away as of Tuesday afternoon, the 50-day moving average at $4,833.30 becomes the next logical target.

Below that, Monday close around $5,384 and the $5,280 EMA represent overhead resistance that bulls need to reclaim to reestablish momentum. The all-time high of $5,594.82 from January 29 remains the ultimate upside target, but it feels considerably more distant after Tuesday 5% collapse.

Technical analysts note that as long as gold holds above the $5,200 area, the broader bullish trend structure remains intact. But the speed and severity of Tuesday reversal, from $5,419 to below $5,100 in less than 24 hours, has clearly damaged short-term momentum.

Silver collapse deserves separate attention because of its sheer magnitude. The metal spiked to $90 per ounce on Monday, a move that reflected both safe-haven flows and industrial-supply-disruption fears tied to Middle Eastern instability. By Tuesday, silver had cratered more than 10% to trade around $79.52, with futures at one point touching $80.08.

Silver amplified volatility relative to gold is a structural feature of the metal: it has a smaller, less liquid market, making it more susceptible to both panic buying and forced liquidation. The 10%-plus single-day decline is a red flag for anyone running leveraged silver positions. It also serves as a leading indicator, as silver tends to peak and trough before gold during volatile cycles. If silver stabilizes here around $79-$80 and begins to build a base, it would be a constructive signal for the broader precious metals complex. If it breaks below $75, gold is almost certainly heading to $4,800 or lower.

The investment banking community remains structurally bullish on gold despite Tuesday rout. JP Morgan has raised its year-end 2026 target to $6,300 per troy ounce, citing ongoing central bank purchases, inflation concerns, dollar uncertainty, and the geopolitical escalation as cumulative tailwinds. A City Index analyst sees $5,500 as achievable in the short term, with new all-time highs above $5,600 following shortly after. Longer-term Fibonacci projections from technical analysts reach as high as $6,100 to $7,200.

The structural argument is powerful: gold recorded its seventh consecutive monthly gain in February, the longest positive streak since 1973. Central bank buying has been relentless. Inflation is reaccelerating. And the geopolitical environment has deteriorated dramatically. None of these factors have changed because of one ugly Tuesday session.

But the path between $5,031 and $6,300 is unlikely to be smooth. If the Iran conflict drags on as Trump has projected, the near-term dynamic could remain hostile: dollar strength, rising yields, margin-call liquidation, and repriced Fed expectations will all weigh on gold until either the conflict resolves or the economic damage becomes severe enough to force a monetary policy reversal. The bullish case requires patience, weeks, possibly months, not days.

Brent crude briefly topped $85 a barrel on Tuesday, the highest since July 2024. WTI surged 8.24% to $77.10. European natural-gas futures have exploded more than 70% in two sessions after Iran knocked out Qatar Ras Laffan LNG complex. Goldman Sachs has priced in an $18-per-barrel risk premium, and Wood Mackenzie warns oil could hit $100 if the Strait of Hormuz blockade persists.

Higher energy prices feed directly into inflation: producer prices, transportation costs, consumer goods, food production. The ISM Manufacturing Prices Paid data at 70.5 already captured early-stage input cost acceleration. If oil stays above $80 for weeks, CPI and PCE readings will follow higher, potentially forcing the Fed into a hawkish stance that no one was pricing in even a week ago.

For gold, this creates a paradox. Rising inflation is traditionally bullish for the metal as a purchasing-power hedge. But rising inflation that leads to higher interest rates and a stronger dollar is bearish for gold in the short term because the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset increases. The resolution depends entirely on whether the Fed tightens (bearish for gold) or eventually accommodates wartime fiscal pressures (bullish for gold). Right now, the market is betting on the former.

The long-term bull case for gold remains intact. Central bank accumulation, structural inflation, de-dollarization trends (which will reassert once the crisis fades), and a geopolitical environment that has fundamentally deteriorated all support prices materially above $5,000 over the medium-to-long term. JP Morgan $6,300 target is not unreasonable on a 9-to-12-month horizon.

But the short-term picture is bearish. The dollar is ripping. Rate-cut expectations are collapsing. Margin calls are forcing liquidation of profitable gold positions. The RSI has rolled over from 80 to 49. And the $5,000 psychological level, now just $30 away, is about to be tested.

For existing positions: hold, but tighten stops. A daily close below $5,000 would shift the bias to outright sell, with the 50-day moving average at $4,833 as the downside target. A break below $4,833 opens a path to $4,500 and would signal that the year rally is undergoing a genuine correction, not just a one-day shakeout.

For new entries: wait. The optimal buy zone sits between $4,800 and $5,000, where the 50-day moving average intersects with the lower boundary of the longer-term uptrend channel. A flush into that zone, likely accompanied by peak dollar strength and maximum pessimism, would represent the highest-conviction entry for a position targeting $5,500-plus by year-end. Chasing gold at $5,100 with the dollar at a one-month high, yields surging, and the Fed repricing toward hawkish is not a trade with favorable risk-reward.

Gold is still in a secular bull market. The seventh consecutive monthly gain in February, the longest winning streak in over 50 years, does not end because of one violent session. But the war, paradoxically, is creating a near-term headwind through the dollar and yield channels that may persist for weeks. The all-time high at $5,594 will eventually fall. Just not this week, and probably not before $5,000 gets tested first.

That’s TradingNEWS.com

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