Gold climbs as ceasefire reshapes the bull case

Gold prices have rebounded to their highest levels in nearly three weeks after the United States and Iran agreed to a two‑week ceasefire, even as the prospect of de‑escalation would normally be expected to cool safe‑haven demand. Spot bullion rose more than 2% on Wednesday to trade around the mid‑4,700s per ounce, having earlier jumped by over 3% to its strongest level since 19 March, while US gold futures for June delivery also advanced.
The move comes on the heels of a sharp sell‑off in March, when gold fell by around 10% as rising oil prices, persistent inflation and firm US economic data led investors to dial back expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts. Higher Treasury yields and a stronger dollar weighed on the non‑yielding metal, even as the conflict in Iran intensified. Wednesday’s rally suggests that, for now, shifts in the interest‑rate and currency outlook are exerting more influence on gold than headline swings in geopolitical risk alone.
Ceasefire, oil, and the macro backdrop
The ceasefire, announced after US President Donald Trump agreed to suspend strikes for two weeks in return for Iran reopening the Strait of Hormuz to energy shipments, sparked a broad relief rally across global markets. Oil prices dropped sharply, with key benchmarks sliding back below the 100‑dollar mark as traders reassessed the risk of prolonged supply disruption. At the same time, the US dollar eased from recent highs and bond markets strengthened, taking some pressure off real yields.
Analysts quoted by major outlets say this combination of a weaker dollar, lower oil prices and reduced near‑term inflation fears has helped revive interest in gold, even as the immediate war premium fades. Some also note that the fragile nature of the ceasefire continues to underpin demand for hedges against further volatility.
Rates, inflation and what comes next
For the Fed, the Middle East shock has complicated an already uncertain rate path. Minutes from the central bank’s March meeting, released on Wednesday, showed officials remaining concerned that inflation could stay above target for longer, in part because of earlier oil price increases. While many policymakers still see scope to cut rates over time, the minutes also highlighted a willingness to keep open the option of further tightening if price pressures do not ease.
Traders will now look to upcoming US inflation data to gauge whether the recent pullback in oil translates into any relief for headline price growth. A stronger‑than‑expected reading would risk reinforcing the higher‑for‑longer narrative on interest rates, a backdrop that tends to cap rallies in gold by lifting yields and the dollar. Softer data, by contrast, could support the view that the Fed will eventually be able to ease policy, which would be more supportive for the metal.
A fragile equilibrium
The ceasefire itself remains temporary and conditional, with negotiations expected to continue in Pakistan later this week and all sides acknowledging significant unresolved issues. Any breakdown in talks that pushed oil prices higher again or reignited fears of a wider conflict could quickly alter the balance of drivers for gold, potentially re‑introducing a stronger safe‑haven bid even as it tightened financial conditions.
For now, gold is being pulled between two forces: relief that has lowered energy prices and supported a weaker dollar, and lingering uncertainty over both the conflict’s trajectory and the Fed’s reaction to stubborn inflation. How that tension resolves — through incoming data, central‑bank communication, or developments on the ground — will likely dictate whether the latest bounce marks the start of a more durable uptrend or just a pause in a still‑fragile market.
The performance figures quoted refer to the past, and past performance is not a guarantee of future performance or a reliable guide to future performance.