Gold's Worst Week Since 1983: below $4,500 with golds highest weekly dollar decline on record
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PREMIUM MEMBERS
The Fibonacci chart does not lie, and right now it is telling a deeply uncomfortable story. Gold closed Friday at $4,497 — slicing through the 0.382 retracement level at $4,654 and now suspended in open air between that broken floor and the next major support at the 0.5 level of $4,361. With no technical structure of consequence between here and there, the question is no longer whether gold tests $4,361 — it is when.
Gold dropped 11% this week, posting its biggest weekly loss since 1983, and is now down more than 14% since the war began. Anchored from the all-time high of $5,602 — the 0 level on the Fibonacci grid — to the September 2025 origin at $3,120, every major retracement level now reads as a casualty report. The 0.236 at $5,016 fell on Wednesday. The 0.382 at $4,654 fell today. The 0.5 retracement at $4,361 is the next line, followed by the 0.618 at $4,068. Sequential downside targets stand at $4,360 as the prior consolidation zone, then the 200-day EMA near $4,200 — the critical bull/bear dividing line. A sustained break below $4,200 opens a path toward $3,500, the very origin of the entire 2025–2026 rally.
The Paradox That Is Destroying Gold
The irony is stark: gold is being sold during an active Middle East conflict precisely because the oil shock from that conflict is reigniting inflation and forcing the Fed to stay hawkish. Higher oil means higher inflation, higher-for-longer rates — and gold suffers despite the geopolitical backdrop that should theoretically be its greatest ally.
The mechanism played out in real time this week. February PPI came in at +0.7%, well above consensus, pushing the 10-year Treasury yield to 4.2% and the Dollar Index toward 99.9 — both direct and severe headwinds for a non-yielding asset whose entire bull thesis rested on falling real yields and a weakening dollar. Brent crude rose 3.3% on Friday alone to settle at $112.19 per barrel, and traders have now canceled nearly all bets that the Federal Reserve could cut rates this year. Some even think the Fed could raise rates in 2026 — a nearly unthinkable scenario before the war began.
"The dollar has been the ultimate safe haven during this conflict," said Daniel Ghali, senior commodity strategist at TD Bank. "That is detrimental to gold since over the last year, gold has been the ultimate safe haven." That role reversal — dollar ascending, gold descending, both driven by the same war — is the defining dynamic of this market and shows no sign of reversing while oil remains above $100.
The Institutional Map vs. the Trading Reality
Gold at $6,000 by year-end remains the target of Wall Street veteran Ed Yardeni, though he warned he is considering lowering his target to $5,000 if gold continues to defy expectations that it should be rising on geopolitical developments, rising inflation, and mounting U.S. government debt. J.P. Morgan's year-end target remains $6,300, BNP Paribas raised its 2026 average forecast by 27% with a peak above $6,250 flagged as probable, and Wells Fargo holds a $6,100–$6,300 range — all set before the Iran conflict added a geopolitical premium on top of the existing structural bull case.
The long-term fundamentals have not changed. The near-term chart has broken badly. As Pepperstone Research Strategist Dilin Wu frames it: "This sharp decline in gold reflects a confluence of factors — large-scale risk asset liquidations, a hawkish shift in Fed expectations, and a stronger dollar." Crucially, he views this as "a pricing logic adjustment rather than a reversal of the long-term trend."
The 0.5 Fibonacci at $4,361 is now the fulcrum. Hold it, and the long-term bull case survives intact. Lose it, and the 0.618 at $4,068 becomes the conversation — and the road back to $6,000 becomes a great deal longer.
Wishing you as always good trading,

Gary S. Wagner - Executive Producer