Gold prices (XAUUSD) rocketed above $5,300 an ounce as escalating US-Iran tensions sparked a broad safe-haven scramble, dragging equities lower and propelling oil higher. Investors dumped risk assets amid fears of wider Middle East conflict following reported US and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets.

Event Details
The conflict intensified overnight with US forces joining Israeli airstrikes on key Iranian military sites, according to initial reports. Gold (XAU) jumped 2.8% to $5,320/oz in early Asian trade, marking its biggest one-day gain in months. Tehran vowed retaliation, heightening the risk of supply disruptions for global energy markets.
Market Snapshot
US stock index futures tumbled, with S&P 500 (SPX) e-minis down 1.4% and Nasdaq 100 (NQ) futures off 1.8%. Brent crude (LCOc1) spiked 4.2% to $82.50 a barrel, reflecting supply fears from the Strait of Hormuz. The dollar index (DXY) gained 0.6% to 108.20 as a go-to refuge.
Risk-Off Flows
Traders rushed into traditional havens, pushing 10-year US Treasury yields 5 bps lower to 4.12%, while the Japanese yen (JPY) strengthened 0.9% to 148.50 per dollar. European Stoxx 600 futures fell 1.2%, with banking shares leading losses on growth worries. Bitcoin (BTC) shed 3% to $92,000 amid the equity downdraft.
Oil and Energy Impact
Brent’s rally erased recent losses, with WTI crude (CLc1) up 4.5% to $77.80. Analysts flagged potential output cuts if Iran closes the Strait, through which 20% of global oil flows. OPEC+ sources indicated monitoring but no immediate response. “This is a classic oil shock setup,” said Mizuho strategist Vishnu Varathan.
Policy Response
The White House urged calm but signaled military readiness, while President Trump convened the National Security Council. Federal Reserve speakers stayed silent so far, though Chair Powell’s March 18 testimony looms larger amid inflation repricing risks. European Central Bank officials noted vigilance on energy pass-through to CPI.
Macro Implications
The flare-up clouds the US growth outlook, with stagflation risks rising if oil holds above $80. Goldman Sachs estimates a $10/barrel Brent rise adds 0.4% to global CPI over 12 months. Fed rate cut odds for June dropped to 65% on CME FedWatch, from 75% pre-event. Equities face headwinds if risk premiums widen 20-30 bps.
Trader Reactions
“Gold’s break above $5,300 targets $5,500 if Iran retaliates meaningfully,” ING analyst Francesco Pesole told Reuters. Hedge funds accelerated haven buying, with CFTC data due Friday to show fresh positioning.
Traders monitor Iranian counterstrike signals, US naval deployments in the Gulf, and Thursday’s EIA oil inventories for supply clues. OPEC+ meeting optics next week and Fed commentary on inflation will shape the next leg.


