Gold prices crash on inflation concerns amid West Asia war

Despite the ongoing war in West Asia battering global markets, gold prices in domestic and global markets are down around 27% from their January peak. Even after a nearly 2% rally over the last couple of days, high crude oil prices are fueling inflation fears, curbing safe-haven demand for gold. The US dollar has emerged as the preferred safe asset.

Gold futures on the Multi-Commodity Exchange have fallen 13% to Rs 1.41 lakh per 10 grams since the West Asia war began late last month. Despite the conflict disrupting global markets, safe-haven demand for the yellow metal is absent this time due to soaring crude oil prices stoking inflation fears worldwide.

"This time, the only negative for gold, despite everything else remaining positive, is the high crude oil prices and therefore inflation, and the strength of the dollar," said Naveen Mathur, director of commodities and currencies at Anand Rathi Shares and Stock Broking. He noted that pre-war expectations of rate cuts by the Federal Reserve and other central banks to promote growth have shifted amid renewed inflation risks.

The CME Fedwatch tool shows no probability of a US Federal Reserve rate cut in April, with 6% of traders anticipating a 25 basis-point hike. In India, inflation remains within the Reserve Bank of India's 2%-6% tolerance band, but prolonged high crude prices could prompt a hawkish stance and delay rate cuts.

The US dollar index has strengthened over 2% to around 100 since the war started, up from 96 levels during peak US tariff threats. This has allowed investors to book profits in gold and pivot to the dollar as a safe haven, unlike earlier surges in 2025 and early 2026.

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Global markets tumbled as US-Iran tensions and prolonged Israeli conflict drove oil prices higher. Asian shares and futures dipped, with investors preparing for extended fighting. The inflationary pressures have reduced expectations for central bank rate cuts.

In the ongoing West Asia conflict—now including heightened Iran-US tensions—gold prices were nearly flat on Friday but headed for a 2% weekly loss. Surging oil prices continue to drive inflation fears and expectations of prolonged high interest rates, tempering safe-haven demand.

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Gold prices have fallen unexpectedly amid escalating geopolitical tensions in West Asia, diverging from their traditional safe-haven role. A strong U.S. dollar, rising Treasury yields, and profit-taking after recent gains are key factors suppressing prices. Analysts note a choppy near-term outlook but constructive long-term prospects.

In the wake of US-Israeli strikes on Iran that killed Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei—detailed in prior coverage of crypto market volatility—gold prices rose 2% while oil surged over 7%, reflecting safe-haven demand amid escalating Middle East tensions.

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Gold prices in Egypt's local market rose by EGP 175, pushing the 21-karat gram to EGP 7,100, tracking global ounce gains amid US-Iran geopolitical tensions. Saeed Imbabi, executive director of iSagha, attributed the increase mainly to the global ounce rise and the strong US dollar.

The Indian government has increased customs duties on gold, silver and platinum to curb imports and preserve foreign exchange reserves amid rising oil prices from the West Asia conflict.

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Silver and gold prices rose on Wednesday following the Federal Reserve's meeting and other central bank announcements. The uptick came as oil prices and the US dollar weakened. Metals gained traction amid broader strength in risk assets.

 

 

 

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