The escalating conflict in the Middle East—marked by coordinated U.S. and Israeli airstrikes on Iran in late February 2026—has sent shockwaves through global financial markets. These strikes, which reportedly targeted key military and nuclear sites and resulted in the death of Iran's Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, prompted immediate Iranian retaliation, including missile barrages against Israel and U.S. interests in the Gulf region. The violence has raised fears of prolonged instability, potential disruptions to critical energy routes like the Strait of Hormuz (through which roughly 20% of global oil flows), and broader inflationary pressures.
Amid this uncertainty, investors have reacted swiftly, driving divergent paths for gold, Bitcoin, and oil. Gold has emerged as the clearest beneficiary, reinforcing its status as a premier safe-haven asset during geopolitical crises. Spot gold prices surged past historic milestones, climbing above $5,300 per ounce in early trading reactions and settling around $5,278–$5,296 per ounce in recent sessions (with futures briefly touching $5,299+). Analysts attribute this rally to heavy institutional and retail flight-to-safety flows, compounded by already strong year-to-date gains of over 22% in 2026. Experts from firms like Marex and ANZ forecast further upside—potentially to $5,500 or even new records above January's peaks near $5,600—if tensions persist or oil-driven inflation accelerates. Central bank buying (projected at ~850 tonnes this year) provides a structural floor, while a weaker U.S. dollar in risk-off environments adds tailwinds. Silver has followed suit, compressing the gold-silver ratio and signaling broader precious metals strength.
Oil prices, meanwhile, have absorbed the largest immediate geopolitical premium. Brent crude jumped toward $72–$73 per barrel (up ~3% in pre-escalation moves), while WTI hovered around $67 per barrel. The threat of supply interruptions—especially if Iran restricts or closes the Strait of Hormuz—has analysts warning of sharp spikes. Barclays and others see Brent testing $100 per barrel in worst-case scenarios involving extended disruptions, with some estimates suggesting $10–$20+ jumps upon market reopenings absent de-escalation. Even limited conflict could embed a persistent $4–$10 risk premium, though OPEC+ output adjustments and global spare capacity might temper extremes if the crisis remains contained. Higher energy costs risk adding 0.6–0.7 percentage points to global inflation, complicating central bank policy and pressuring equities.








