Gold and Silver's Direction Uncertain; as U.S.-Iran Ceasefire in Question; and Could Surge higher if not Resolved Quickly
Video section is only available for
PREMIUM MEMBERS
Two-Week Truce Lights the Fuse, Whether It Burns Is Another Question.
Gold and silver pricing has not found an absolute direction as this crisis changes moment-by-moment. Earlier today after President Trump announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran, brokered by Pakistan just hours before his threatened deadline for strikes on Iranian civilian infrastructure. The relief rally was swift and broad, though markets almost immediately began stress-testing how long it might hold.
Front-month Comex gold for April rose nearly 2% to $4,749.50 an ounce, its third consecutive daily gain, leaving the metal up 9.8% year-to-date. Front-month Comex silver for April surged 4.7% to $75.224, snapping a three-session losing streak. Gold reached as high as $4,850 and silver touched nearly $77 per ounce in early trading after the ceasefire announcement sent oil below $100 per barrel and weakened the dollar 0.8% against the euro.
The gains were meaningful. They were also immediately complicated.
Pakistani Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif, whose government brokered the agreement, was already calling out violations within hours of the announcement and urging "all parties to exercise restraint and respect the ceasefire for two weeks." Gold jumped 3.3% to $4,855 before dropping back by $100 per ounce mid-afternoon as silver retreated from its highs, as Bahrain, Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the UAE all reported continued air attacks, while Israeli strikes on Beirut "killed and injured hundreds of people."
The mechanics of today's rally were straightforward. For months, the primary headwind suppressing gold and silver was not the war itself — it was the inflation the war created. The ceasefire and the corresponding drop in oil prices eased concerns of an extended conflict that sparks inflation and higher interest rates. While gold is traditionally considered an inflation hedge, the metal can lose value when interest rates rise to combat rising prices.
Carsten Fritsch at Commerzbank summed up the dynamic: "The sharp fall in oil prices is leading to an easing of inflation risks — a fall in bond yields from which gold, as a non-interest-bearing investment, benefits. Whether this remains the case depends on whether a lasting peace settlement is found in the coming two weeks, or whether there is renewed escalation thereafter."
The central bank selling pressure that has weighed on gold since hostilities began also stands to reverse if peace holds. Turkey has sold or loaned out $20 billion in gold since the start of fighting, according to the Financial Times, as it sought to defend the lira. Poland and Russia have been cited as potential sellers as well. A durable ceasefire removes the currency crisis logic underpinning those decisions.
The Ceasefire Is a Pause, not a Resolution
The harder question is whether Wednesday's rally is pricing in an outcome that diplomacy has not yet delivered. Pratibha Thaker, regional director at the Economist Intelligence Unit, described the ceasefire as "a huge relief" but was unequivocal: "What we are seeing right now is a pause in the conflict, rather than any kind of lasting resolution. It is a very fragile arrangement. The ceasefire hinges on Iran suspending its military activity and fully reopening the Strait of Hormuz. Crucially, there is a deep trust deficit on both sides."
The immediate next step is the start of negotiations in Islamabad, where U.S. and Iranian officials are expected to meet under Pakistani mediation on Friday, April 10. Matt Gertken, chief geopolitical strategist at BCA Research, warned that Trump may temporarily accept Iran as a gatekeeper — with midterm elections approaching and gasoline prices sharply higher than before the war — but that "fighting will ignite later this year, if not later this month."
The Bull Case If Peace Holds
For investors with a longer time horizon, the structural setup for gold remains highly constructive. The medium-term tailwinds stagflation risks, U.S. election uncertainty, and the prospect of a weaker U.S. dollar alongside falling real rates should support a move toward $5,900 per ounce by late 2026, according to UBS strategist Dominic Schnider.
Silver, as ever, amplifies gold's moves in both directions. Analyst Marek Rogalski at DM BOŚ noted that silver continues to earn its "turbo-gold" label, with the breakout above $76.10 confirming the uptrend from the March 23 panic low. Near-term technical resistance sits at $79.50–$80.00.
The setup for the next several weeks is unusually binary. If the Islamabad talks yield a credible framework, the war premium that has suppressed gold via the rate-hike channel lifts entirely — and the metal's underlying bull case reasserts with little in the way of structural resistance between current levels and $5,400. If the ceasefire fractures, oil returns above $110, the Fed holds, and gold's painful 2026 consolidation continues.
As one analyst at EToro put it: "TACO is becoming less of a joke and more of a trading strategy. Investors have seen enough last-minute pivots to know that a two-week deadline isn't necessarily what it seems."
For precious metals, that uncertainty cuts both ways.
Wishing you as always good trading,

Gary S. Wagner - Executive Producer