[TMGM Financial Breakfast] Gold Stress Test Shows Safe-Haven Demand Still Intact, but Panic Has Yet to Peak
Amid geopolitical turmoil, gold staged a classic “spike and retrace,” highlighting that markets are pricing the duration of the conflict rather than its dramatic headlines. The current move reflects premium compression, not a complete disappearance of risk.

The United States and Israel launched a sudden strike on Iran over the weekend, prompting a series of retaliatory actions from Tehran. As global markets reopened, sentiment was tense, and gold surged on Monday, briefly touching a high of $5,419 per ounce.

The initial spike sent a clear message: gold’s safe-haven function remains effective. However, what followed was even more telling. Prices retreated sharply from their highs, and this price action matters more than the headlines. This is not about whether geopolitical risks have escalated, but about how markets price that escalation and how quickly they reassess the situation.

At the market open, gold behaved exactly as a safe-haven asset should during geopolitical conflict — immediate repricing, no hesitation, no liquidity breakdown, no delay. The subsequent pullback is the true signal. Despite alarming headlines and intense rhetoric, gold failed to hold its peak gains. This does not mean risks have vanished; rather, it suggests markets are not yet positioning for prolonged regional instability.

Markets initially priced in a worst-case scenario and then began to recalibrate. This does not resemble pricing for regime-change-level disruption, but rather a compression of risk premiums. Importantly, gold remains above its weekly lows, preventing the current move from being classified as a structural breakdown.

If investors become convinced that the Iran conflict will be resolved swiftly and decisively, the pullback could deepen significantly. Instead, what we are seeing is controlled compression — markets trimming emergency hedges rather than abandoning protection altogether.

Gold is not pricing the strike itself; it is pricing how long instability may persist. Duration matters more than drama. If the conflict appears likely to be resolved quickly, geopolitical premiums will gradually fade. But if retaliation expands or the conflict drags on, the path back toward historical highs could quickly come back into view.

Market Interpretation:

On the four-hour chart, gold has pulled back and rebounded, with MACD lines and the histogram converging below the zero axis. The surge confirmed that gold’s safe-haven appeal remains intact. The pullback confirms that investors have not yet priced in a permanent escalation.

This balance is significant. It indicates that gold holders remain largely institutional and rational, rather than driven by panic or speculative frenzy. The premium is flexible — not fragile.


Aiko Tanaka is our precious metals specialist with 10 years of experience in commodity markets. She holds a degree in Geology and professional certification in Commodity Market Analysis, covering gold, silver, platinum, and palladium markets with mining industry insights. Alongside her analysis, Aiko has authored thought-leadership pieces on commodities and contributes educational content aimed at new investors in the sector.
Baca Lagi

SEBUT HARGA LANGSUNG

Nama / Simbol
Carta
% Perubahan / Harga
EURUSD
Perubahan 1 hari
+0%
0
XAUUSD
Perubahan 1 hari
+0%
0
BTCUSD
Perubahan 1 hari
+0%
0

SEMUA TENTANG FOREX

Terokai Lebih Banyak Alat
Akademi Perdagangan
Layari pelbagai artikel pendidikan yang merangkumi strategi perdagangan, wawasan pasaran, dan asas kewangan, semuanya di satu tempat.
Ketahui Lebih Lanjut
Kursus
Terokai kursus perdagangan berstruktur yang direka untuk menyokong pertumbuhan anda di setiap peringkat perjalanan perdagangan anda.
Ketahui Lebih Lanjut
Webinar
Sertai webinar langsung dan atas permintaan untuk mendapatkan wawasan pasaran masa nyata dan strategi perdagangan daripada pakar industri.
Ketahui Lebih Lanjut