Key Highlights
- Gold futures plummeted 7% on Monday, eliminating all year-to-date gains for 2026
- Spot gold tumbled to approximately $4,288 per ounce — marking the steepest weekly decline since 1983
- President Trump issued Iran a 48-hour ultimatum to reopen the Strait of Hormuz
- Surging crude oil prices stemming from Middle East tensions are amplifying inflation concerns and diminishing expectations for interest rate reductions
- Silver and platinum experienced significant declines; both the ECB and BoE indicated potential rate increases ahead
The precious metals market has experienced a dramatic downturn this week, with gold suffering substantial losses as the escalating US-Israel-Iran confrontation drives crude oil prices higher and intensifies concerns about persistent inflation.
Spot gold plummeted to approximately $4,288 per ounce during Monday’s session. The yellow metal declined more than 10% during the previous week — representing its most severe weekly loss since 1983.
Gold futures contracted roughly 7% during Monday’s morning session. These steep losses have completely wiped out the metal’s year-to-date appreciation in 2026.
Gold entered this year riding considerable upward momentum. The precious metal had delivered an extraordinary 65% surge throughout 2025. However, the intensifying Middle East warfare has rapidly transformed market dynamics.
The primary catalyst behind the selloff centers on inflation pressures. Escalating crude oil costs, triggered by the regional conflict, are generating anxiety among market participants that global central banks will maintain elevated interest rates — or potentially implement additional increases.
The Inflation-Gold Dynamic Explained
Gold generates no yield or interest income. When borrowing costs remain elevated or trend upward, market participants typically gravitate toward income-generating investments. This fundamental shift diminishes gold’s comparative appeal.
The US dollar has simultaneously gained strength, creating additional downward pressure on precious metal valuations. A robust greenback increases the cost of gold for international buyers utilizing alternative currencies.
Greg Shearer, JPMorgan’s head of base and precious metals strategy, characterized the decline as “an extremely brutal flush.” He explained that gold became entangled in a widespread “sell everything” movement, rather than experiencing isolated liquidation.
The European Central Bank and Bank of England have both indicated potential rate increases within the coming months. While the Federal Reserve has not telegraphed hikes, financial markets have progressively eliminated any anticipation of cuts during 2025.
Analysts at OCBC stated the market is “trading less on geopolitical hedging flows and more on fears that stickier inflation could prompt a more hawkish central bank stance.”
Presidential Ultimatum Intensifies Market Anxiety
During the weekend, President Trump delivered a 48-hour ultimatum to Iran demanding the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz, warning he would “obliterate” vital energy facilities should Tehran decline.
🚨 “If Iran doesn’t FULLY OPEN, WITHOUT THREAT, the Strait of Hormuz, within 48 HOURS from this exact point in time, the United States of America will hit and obliterate their various POWER PLANTS, STARTING WITH THE BIGGEST ONE FIRST…” – President DONALD J. TRUMP pic.twitter.com/htLz1A0Mf7
— The White House (@WhiteHouse) March 22, 2026
Tehran’s response included threats to target energy and water systems throughout the Middle East region and to impose a complete blockade of the strategic waterway.
The Israeli-Iranian confrontation has now extended into its fourth consecutive week. Any further escalation could propel oil prices significantly higher, compounding existing inflation anxieties.
Remarkably, despite heightened geopolitical uncertainty, gold has failed to attract traditional safe-haven capital flows. Instead, inflation-related concerns have overwhelmingly dominated market psychology.
Broader precious metals weakness extended across the sector. Silver declined 2.7% to reach $65.90 per ounce. Platinum contracted 3.9% to $1,850 per ounce. Copper similarly registered sharp decreases.
Ewa Manthey, commodities strategist at ING, observed that during periods of market turbulence, gold’s exceptional liquidity often positions it as a funding source — prompting investors to liquidate holdings to offset losses in other portfolio positions.
Despite near-term weakness, JPMorgan analysts maintain a constructive long-term outlook on gold. They indicated that should energy supply disruptions persist and economic growth suffer negative impacts, “the backdrop for gold will likely quickly flip materially bullish.”
As of Monday morning, spot gold was changing hands at its most depressed level since late December.
