There was something odd about the atmosphere at trading desks last week. Not quite panic. It was more akin to a tired realization. Gold had been rising for months, the kind of run that makes everyone feel momentarily astute, until on April 1st, President Trump approached a podium and began discussing Iran. By the time he was done, spot gold had dropped by almost two percent, to about $4,664 per ounce. Silver dropped more forcefully. Palladium and platinum followed them down. It’s the kind of move that causes a trader to shrug and turn to the person seated next to him after staring at the screen for a long minute while his coffee gets cold.
It’s interesting that, according to the old playbook, the response wasn’t particularly rational. Gold is expected to rise with geopolitical escalation. That is the cliché, and it persisted for decades. However, this conflict with Iran has been affecting that relationship unusually. Trump’s remarks caused Brent crude to rise to $105 per barrel. Expectations for inflation gradually increased. Yields on the Treasury followed. And in a world where bonds and cash were subtly becoming more desirable, gold, which pays no interest, suddenly seemed less appealing. Investors seem to still be attempting to determine which regulations are applicable in this market and which have quietly ceased to function.

The volatility appears almost theatrical when you walk through the timeline. Gold experienced its worst five-session run since 1983 in late March, briefly reaching $4,098 before Trump postponed scheduled strikes, causing the metal to plummet back $400 in a few hours. During premarket trading that morning, the SPDR Gold Trust fell below $400. From its January peak of $121, silver lost about half of its value. The speed and the way the bid simply vanished and then abruptly returned will stick in the minds of those who witnessed it happen in real time.
| Topic Snapshot | Details |
|---|---|
| Subject | Gold market volatility following Trump’s April 2026 Iran address |
| Spot Gold (April 2, 2026) | $4,664.39/oz, down roughly 2% |
| Silver (same session) | $71.67/oz, down 4.6% |
| Year-to-Date Peak | Above $5,400/oz before the March selloff |
| Major Bank Targets (Late 2026) | $6,000–$6,300/oz (Deutsche Bank, JPMorgan) |
| Key Catalyst | Trump’s prime-time speech threatening escalation against Iran |
| Dollar Index Move | +0.27% post-speech |
| December Fed Rate-Cut Odds | Dropped from ~25% to just 12% |
| Sentiment | Short-term bearish, long-term structurally bullish |
| Risk Scenario | Sharp pullback toward sub-$4,000 in worst case |
And yet. The analysts have not flinched. JPMorgan increased its year-end projection to $6,300. Deutsche Bank will continue to use $6,000. It was referred to as a healthy reset by Sucden Financial. The decline, according to Samco Securities’ Apurva Sheth, was the kind of cooling-off the market required before its next surge. In more direct terms, Michael Hsueh of Deutsche Bank stated that the situation doesn’t seem ready for a long-term reversal. They might be correct. They might also be based on a theory that hasn’t been thoroughly tested by the events in the Middle East.
It is still difficult to reject the structural case for gold. Even when speculative money flees, central banks are purchasing at a rate that has never been seen before, creating a sort of floor beneath the price. The wild card is the Federal Reserve, which is currently led by Kevin Warsh. Gold and silver fell off a cliff the day Trump named Warsh, who has historically been seen as hawkish. However, Warsh has recently loosened his stance on rates, and the calculations for non-yielding assets will rapidly shift if the Fed begins to cut rates once more.
When you look away from the commotion, the market appears anxious but unbroken. There have been violent dips. Recoveries have been quicker. While the long-term narrative of central bank demand and currency anxiety hasn’t really changed, profit-taking, the strength of the dollar, and shifting odds on Fed policy are all working in the short term. It’s difficult to ignore the bear-case scenarios that linger around the edges of research notes, just as it’s difficult to ignore how confident the big banks sound. It is tempting to take a side as you watch this play out. The majority of analysts have. The next six months will determine whether or not they are correct.
