Why did gold crash during this Middle East conflict?

robot
Abstract generation in progress

As missiles streak across the Middle Eastern night sky, gold—this “ultimate safe haven” etched into human DNA—unfolds its most brutal plunge in 45 years at the same moment.

March 23, 2026, is destined to be recorded in precious metals history. Just three weeks after Israel and the U.S. declared war on Iran, spot gold plummeted over 8 intraday, breaking through four key levels—$4,400, $4,300, $4,200, and $4,100—and wiping out all gains for the year. Silver fared even worse, dropping over 10% at one point to a low of $61 per ounce.

This is no longer a “correction” but a stampede.

War and inflation should be gold’s most loyal allies. But this time, they became the final straw crushing gold.

  1. Unusual Crash: When Safe-Haven Assets No Longer Safe

● The market is teaching everyone a harsh truth: there are no eternal safe harbors, only eternal capital pursuit.

● Since the conflict escalated, gold has fallen nearly 20%, retracing more than 22% from its mid-January high of $5,594. What does this mean? If you bought gold before the war, your three-week return even lagged behind a basket of micro-cap stocks—those highly volatile assets once scorned by the market.

● Even more bizarre, this decline isn’t an isolated asset correction but a rare “simultaneous fall” with stocks. The negative correlation between gold and equities has been completely broken in extreme conditions.

Why? Because the market’s pricing logic has fundamentally shifted.

  1. Who’s the Real Culprit? Rate Logic Crushing Safe-Haven Logic

“The chaos-era gold” is essentially a simplified narrative. In reality, gold’s pricing involves at least three layers of game theory: interest rate expectations, dollar movements, and risk sentiment.

This time, all three pointed downward simultaneously.

  1. Rising oil prices kill rate cut expectations

Middle Eastern conflict pushed Brent crude above $100, hitting a new high since mid-2022. This should have been a catalyst boosting gold’s safe-haven appeal—oil crises always accompany runaway inflation.

But the problem is, rising oil prices directly changed the Fed’s calculations. On March 18, the Fed announced holding rates steady at 3.5%-3.75%, with dot plots showing most officials supporting only 0-1 rate cuts this year—significantly less than the previous 2-3 cuts expected. Powell explicitly stated: no rate cuts until inflation clearly recedes.

This dealt a fatal blow to gold. As a non-yielding asset, gold’s holding cost is directly linked to interest rates. When the market shifts from “rate cut trading” to “rate hike expectations,” funds rapidly exit gold, flowing into interest-bearing government bonds and dollar assets.

  1. The dollar’s double advantage

Even more tricky, the dollar in this conflict has shown a rare “double strength”—both safe-haven and yield.

Benefiting from the U.S. as a net oil exporter, the dollar index rose above 100. Holding dollars not only hedges geopolitical risks but also earns over 4% risk-free interest. In contrast, gold offers nothing but “security.”

When panic is at its peak, investors prioritize assets that can both hedge risks and generate yield.

  1. The backlash of crowded trades

But the core reason for this plunge lies in one data point: as of March 17, hedge funds and other large speculators had increased their net long gold positions to the highest in seven weeks.

What does this mean? Gold had become a highly crowded trade over the past year.

When everyone is on the boat, the boat becomes most dangerous. After the outbreak of war, these leveraged positions were forced to unwind—some to cut losses, some to meet margin calls elsewhere, some just because “others are running, so I run too.”

A stampede occurred. Assets that had risen the most previously fell the deepest during retreat. Gold perfectly exemplifies this iron law.

  1. Deeper Structural Cracks: Are Central Banks No Longer Buying Gold?

If speculative exits are “fast variables,” then the wavering of central bank gold buying is a “slow variable” capable of altering long-term gold pricing.

Over the past two years, a core pillar of gold’s super bull market was the shift of global reserves from dollars to gold after Russian assets were frozen. In 2025, net central bank gold purchases still exceeded 300 tons. This was the most solid structural support for gold.

But the Iran war disrupted this logic.

● The International Energy Agency (IEA) called this oil supply disruption “the largest supply shock in global oil market history.” For oil-importing countries, what’s needed most now is foreign exchange reserves to ensure energy imports, not further gold accumulation.

● An even more extreme scenario could occur in Persian Gulf oil producers. If the Strait of Hormuz is blocked, halting oil and gas exports, these traditional gold buyers might turn into sellers—they need cash to sustain their finances, not to stockpile gold bars.

● Meanwhile, Indian physical gold holders are also showing signs of movement. Rising oil prices hit the local economy, and residents may be forced to cash in jewelry and bars to cope with living costs. When central banks and retail investors switch from buyers to sellers simultaneously, the gold market suddenly finds no one left to take the other side.

  1. AiCoin Perspective: How to Survive in This Market?

This level of volatility is destructive for traders but also a reshuffling opportunity. On the AiCoin platform, we observe several key phenomena:

  1. Multi-account management becomes essential

During the plunge, many asset management teams faced urgent liquidation needs. Previously, managing 50 accounts required over half an hour of manual operation, missing critical windows. With AiCoin’s multi-account order feature, these institutions can close positions in seconds, setting unified stop-loss levels.

In this gold crash, the fastest responders were those using batch trading tools. When algorithms triggered stop-losses, millisecond responses determined the loss size.

  1. The value of cross-market monitoring

The linkage between gold, stocks, the dollar, and oil intensified sharply in extreme conditions. AiCoin’s panoramic account management allows users to monitor all holdings and fund flows in real time, quickly identifying which assets are being “bleed out.”

In this crash, many professional traders anticipated gold’s breakdown by observing real-time movements of the dollar index and oil prices.

  1. Leverage as a double-edged sword

The scale of leverage in the gold market is hard to quantify precisely, but from long position data, many leveraged funds were forced to liquidate. AiCoin’s risk control system reminds users: when market volatility (VIX) spikes, leverage should be reduced accordingly.

  1. Future Outlook: Can You Still Buy Gold?

● In the short term, negative factors are not yet cleared. After Trump announced on March 23 to delay strikes on Iran’s energy facilities, gold briefly rebounded from $4,100 to above $4,400. But this is only a “pause,” not a “cancellation.” The 48-hour final ultimatum still casts a shadow, and market sentiment could turn again at any moment.

● In the medium term, the key variable is whether oil prices can fall back. If crude oil cools, rate cut expectations may re-emerge, giving gold a breathing space.

● In the long term, the fundamental logic of gold remains intact. De-dollarization is a structural trend, and central bank gold buying is merely slowing down rather than reversing. Galaxy Securities’ assessment is worth noting: this correction is more about rhythm than trend reversal.

But for traders right now, the most important thing to understand is: the market is shifting from a “credit logic” to a “rate logic.” At this stage, the dollar takes precedence over gold, and interest rates outweigh geopolitical factors.

Bottom fishing? Yes, but with risk controls.

As the Shanghai Gold Exchange warned on March 23: “Recent factors affecting market stability are numerous, and precious metal prices are experiencing increased volatility.”

In this era of explosive volatility, survival is more important than betting on the right direction.

View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
  • Reward
  • Comment
  • Repost
  • Share
Comment
Add a comment
Add a comment
No comments
  • Pin