GOLD STEADIES AS GEOPOLITICAL STORM AND LABOR DATA CLOUD OUTLOOK
Video section is only available for
PREMIUM MEMBERS
Gold prices edged higher in Wednesday trading as a pullback in the U.S. dollar offset mixed signals from the American labor market, while the widening military conflict between the United States, Israel, and Iran continued to drive robust safe-haven demand for the precious metal.
Spot gold hovered near $5,400 per ounce, just below the record high of $5,417 touched earlier this week, as investors weighed a deteriorating geopolitical landscape against fresh economic data. The dollar eased following sharp gains on Tuesday, a development that lent direct support to bullion. Because gold is priced globally in U.S. dollars, a softer greenback makes the metal less expensive for buyers holding other currencies, typically boosting demand.
The dominant force driving gold's extraordinary run, however, remains the escalating conflict in the Middle East. The United States and Israel have pressed on with round-the-clock military operations against Iran, and the conflict took a dramatic turn this week when U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth announced that an American submarine had sunk an Iranian warship off the southern coast of Sri Lanka — a development that significantly widened Washington's naval pursuit of Iranian forces and sent fresh waves of anxiety through global markets. Iran's threats to restrict passage through the Strait of Hormuz, a waterway handling approximately one-fifth of the world's daily oil supply, have added an energy shock dimension to the crisis, further cementing gold's appeal as a hedge against systemic risk.
The metal is benefiting from a rare convergence of tailwinds: persistent geopolitical uncertainty, expectations of Federal Reserve rate cuts later in the year, sustained central bank accumulation, and a broader global retreat from dollar-denominated assets. As a non-yielding asset, gold tends to attract capital during periods of low or falling interest rates, when the opportunity cost of holding it diminishes relative to bonds and other yield-bearing instruments. The Fed has held its benchmark rate steady at 3.50 to 3.75 percent since its January meeting, and while the probability of a March cut remains negligible — CME FedWatch data puts it below five percent — markets are pricing in cuts in the second half of 2026.
Wednesday's ADP National Employment Report offered a mixed picture for those hoping rate relief might arrive sooner. U.S. private payrolls increased more than expected in February, a resilient reading on the surface, though data for the prior month was revised sharply lower — a caveat that tempered enthusiasm and kept rate cut bets broadly intact. All eyes now turn to Friday's official nonfarm payrolls report for February. Economists surveyed by Reuters project a gain of just 59,000 jobs last month, a steep deceleration from January's 130,000 print. A soft result would likely reinforce the case for monetary easing, providing further support for gold prices.
Institutional demand shows no signs of abating. Central banks globally have continued to accumulate gold reserves at historically elevated rates, driven in part by a desire to diversify away from U.S. dollar assets amid concerns over sanctions risk and the long-term sustainability of American fiscal policy. J.P. Morgan has forecast gold demand will push prices toward $5,000 per ounce by year-end 2026 — a target the market has already blown past — and some analysts now see a path to $6,000 or higher if geopolitical pressures persist. Greenlight Capital's David Einhorn, a prominent gold advocate, has argued the Federal Reserve will ultimately be forced to cut rates more aggressively than markets currently expect a scenario that would further bolster the metal's appeal.
For now, the confluence of war, monetary uncertainty, and dollar weakness has produced a market environment in which gold continues to rewrite its own record books. Whether Friday's jobs data prompts a reassessment or simply adds another layer to an already compelling safe-haven narrative remains to be seen.
Wishing you as always good trading,

Gary S. Wagner - Executive Producer