Gold gains as Middle East conflict revive safe-haven bid

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Gold dore bars stacked at the Perth Mint Refinery, operated by Gold Corp., in Perth, Australia, on Thursday, Feb. 5, 2026.

Matt Jelonek | Bloomberg | Getty Images

Gold prices climbed 2% on Wednesday, rebounding from a more than one-week low hit ​in the previous session, as ​the dollar took ​a breather and escalating tensions in the Middle East boosted safe-haven demand for the yellow metal.

Spot gold gained 1.8% to $5,175.39 per ounce. U.S. gold futures ⁠for ‌April delivery added 1.2% to $5,186.90.

The U.S. dollar ⁠fell 0.1%, making greenback-priced gold more affordable for buyers using other currencies.

“After the past few days of position unwinds and dollar strength, markets are back to a more typical macro risk-off stance, ‌with silver higher too. A pause in the rise of the dollar and Treasury yields helps with their opportunity costs,” said Jamie ​Dutta, market analyst at Nemo.money.

“Gold and silver’s safe-haven characteristics can shine again,” Dutta added.

Gold fell more than 4% on Tuesday, as investors piled into the dollar and inflation concerns dimmed bets on ⁠interest rate cuts, which could lower the opportunity cost of holding the metal.

Spot silver, meanwhile, advanced ‌4.5% to $85.74 per ounce on Wednesday, after falling more ‌than 8% in the last session.

U.S. forces continued a round-the-clock assault on Iran, and Israel mounted a “broad wave” of strikes on Wednesday, targeting Iranian missile sites and air defense ⁠systems.

Asian stocks tanked, as investors dumped crowded bets on chipmakers on worries ⁠that the widening Middle East war will drive an oil ⁠shock that raises inflation and delays interest rate cuts.

Investors widely expect the U.S. Federal Reserve to hold rates at the end of ​its next two-day meeting on ‌March 18, according to the CME Group’s FedWatch tool.

“If the military campaign prolongs or expands across the region, safe-haven demand could continue to support gold above the $5,000/oz level and potentially open the door for a retest of the recent highs,” said Linh Tran, ​senior market analyst at XS.com.