Another 2% Down: War Usually Helps Gold, Why Not This Time?
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Gold dropped another 2% on Monday. The metal is now trading near $4,400, last seen in late 2025. A brutal three-week selloff has wiped out everything gold built in early 2026.
The Iran war didn’t just shock oil markets — it upended the logic driving gold higher.
The Oil Shock Changed the Math
Gold is supposed to be a safe haven. Investors buy it when the world feels dangerous. But this war came with an oil shock. That changed everything.
Surging crude prices are pushing inflation higher worldwide. Central banks were expected to cut rates this year. Now they are holding steady. Some are even discussing hikes. Higher rates mean bonds pay more. That makes gold, which pays nothing, less attractive by comparison.
The US dollar has also strengthened since the war began. Gold is priced in dollars. A stronger dollar makes gold more expensive for buyers outside the US. That shrinks global demand and adds downward pressure.
There is also a momentum problem. Gold rallied 64% in 2025. It hit $5,000 for the first time in January. That kind of rally attracts speculative money. When sentiment shifts, those investors sell first and ask questions later. That is exactly what happened.
What the Charts Are Telling Traders
Gold has fallen for eight straight sessions. The weekly loss reached 12%. The yearly gain has shrunk to under 2%.
Monday brought a brief bounce above $4,500. But it didn’t hold. Gold slipped back below $4,400 within hours. The RSI fell below 30, a level that signals oversold conditions. Some traders see that as a buying opportunity. Others see it as a warning.
The $4,300 zone is now the critical support level. Losing it could accelerate selling further. Most year-end targets on Wall Street still sit above $5,000. But those calls are being quietly reassessed.
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