commodities

Gold Pauses After Middle East War Rally

FC
Fazen Capital Research·
6 min read
1,443 words
Key Takeaway

Gold traded near $2,320/oz on Mar 24, 2026 after an ~11% YoY rise; BMO calls the move a pause not a reversal as real yields and ETF flows set the next tone.

Lead paragraph

Gold traded in a narrow band near $2,320 per troy ounce on March 24, 2026 as markets digested comments from BMO that the metal’s rally is "paused, not over." BMO’s note, reported by Seeking Alpha on Mar 24, 2026, framed recent price action as a volatility-driven consolidation following a period of robust gains tied to geopolitical risk in the Middle East (Seeking Alpha, Mar 24, 2026). Year-on-year, gold has delivered double-digit returns — roughly +11% YoY through the first quarter of 2026 — while investors reassess near-term drivers including real yields, dollar direction, and central bank flows (source: market data compiled by Fazen Capital, March 24, 2026). This pause has been accompanied by options-implied volatility repricing lower and short-term liquidity tightening in futures markets, signaling a technical consolidation rather than structural reversal. The following analysis provides detailed data points, comparative context against benchmarks and peers, and our perspective on potential catalysts and risks.

Context

The immediate catalyst for gold’s advance since late 2025 has been heightened geopolitical tension in the Middle East, which pushed safe-haven demand from both sovereigns and private investors. According to a March 24, 2026 note reported by Seeking Alpha, BMO analysts characterized the price action as a pause rather than a termination of the bullish trend, emphasizing that the macro backdrop remains supportive for non-yielding assets when real yields decline. That view aligns with observable market moves: 10-year real yields in the U.S. have oscillated, and periods of real yield compression historically correspond with upward pressure on gold (U.S. Treasury and Bureau of Labor Statistics data, 2024–2026). On the supply side, global mine production increased modestly in 2025 but remained below the rate needed to offset central bank net purchases, which have been a structural source of demand in recent years (World Gold Council reporting, 2025).

Beyond geopolitics, portfolio rebalancing and retail flows have reinforced the trend. Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) tracking physical gold registered net inflows in several months of 2025 and early 2026; SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) and iShares Physical Gold (IAU) reported notable increases in ounces held in late 2025, underscoring investor preference for liquid, ETF-based exposure (ETF issuer reports, Dec 2025–Mar 2026). Currency moves have also been significant: a softer U.S. dollar in Q4 2025 relative to Q3 provided an additional tailwind, amplifying dollar-denominated demand. The pause observed on March 24 reflects the interaction of these drivers with short-term profit-taking and a decompression of near-term volatility.

Data Deep Dive

Price and positioning: On Mar 24, 2026, COMEX gold futures traded around $2,320/oz (CME Group data). That level represents roughly an 11% year-over-year gain compared with approx. $2,090/oz on Mar 24, 2025 (Bloomberg pricing). Managed-money positions reported in the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) Commitments of Traders (COT) series showed elevated net-long positions through Q4 2025, with partial trimming in early Q1 2026 consistent with the consolidation phase. Open interest in front-month contracts tightened during the March consolidation, suggesting liquidity sensitivity around headline events.

Volatility and macro correlations: Implied volatility on gold options retraced from a spike in late 2025 to lower levels in March 2026, reducing the cost of hedging for marginal buyers but also lowering the immediate incentive for leveraged momentum players to re-enter. Real U.S. Treasury yields — the key macro offset for gold — moved from peak levels in mid-2025 down by approximately 60 basis points into early 2026 (10-year TIPS, year-to-date change), a material swing that historically aligns with multi-month gold rallies. CPI dynamics remain relevant: headline CPI slowed in early 2026 relative to the inflationary peaks of 2022–2023, which has limited the urgency for additional Fed tightening but still leaves real yields structurally lower than pre-2022 levels (Bureau of Labor Statistics, monthly CPI reports).

Comparisons and peers: Gold’s performance stands in contrast to industrial metals and energy. For example, copper has been essentially flat YoY through March 2026, while Brent crude oil is up approximately 18% YoY on supply-side tightening (ICE/Platts, Mar 2026). Compared with sovereign bonds, gold has outperformed global aggregate bonds in total return terms over the past 12 months when adjusted for currency effects, highlighting its role as a strategic diversifier. Versus silver and platinum, gold’s advance has been more orderly; silver’s higher beta delivered larger percentage swings and greater ETF turnover volatility during the same period.

Sector Implications

For mining companies, the consolidation in the gold price is a mixed signal. Producers with lower costs and stable cash production — the large-cap majors — continue to benefit from margin expansion realized since late 2024, but capital allocation decisions (M&A, buybacks, capex) are increasingly sensitive to short-term price consolidation. Junior miners and exploration firms are particularly vulnerable to a prolonged pause: funding costs and risk appetite for equity raises compress when prices plateau, evidenced by reduced financing activity in Q1 2026 relative to the prior year (capital markets issuance data, industry reports).

ETFs and physical demand: The ETF channel remains a critical barometer. Net inflows into gold ETFs in 2025 and early 2026 accounted for a significant share of overall demand, helping to absorb supply-side limitations. Sovereign demand — central bank purchases — continued but at a measured pace; central bank buying in 2025 was a substantial, though not unprecedented, contributor to balance dynamics (World Gold Council, 2025). If ETF inflows slow further, the market will rely more heavily on central bank and private investor flows to sustain prices.

Macro and currency implications: The gold pause affects currency strategies as well. A stabilized gold price reduces immediate tactical pressure on commodity-linked currencies but keeps geopolitical risk premia embedded in FX valuations. For example, the Australian dollar and Canadian dollar saw muted responses to the gold consolidation, underlining that commodity currency moves are increasingly nuanced and influenced by broader global growth signals as much as metal-specific demand.

Risk Assessment

Key downside risks include a sudden rise in real yields should inflation expectations re-anchor or the Federal Reserve signal further tightening. A 50–75 basis-point reversal in 10-year real yields would likely exert pronounced downward pressure on gold, given historical sensitivity. Secondly, a rapid normalization of U.S.-China relations or a de-escalation in the Middle East could trigger a swift reallocation out of safe havens, producing outsized losses relative to the pause observed.

On the upside, renewed escalation in geopolitical tensions, an unexpected pick-up in inflation momentum, or a marked increase in central bank purchases would quickly re-ignite the rally. Liquidity risk is salient: compressed open interest and lower options-implied volatility leave the market vulnerable to large moves on headline events. Operational risks for miners, such as strikes or permitting delays, could tighten supply and amplify price moves should demand resurrect.

Fazen Capital Perspective

Fazen Capital assesses the current consolidation as a technically healthy re-pricing that does not by itself negate the structural drivers for gold over the medium term. Our analysis differentiates between headline-driven spikes and trend-sustaining flows: the recent Middle East tensions generated a shock-induced inflow that lifted headline prices, but long-term appreciation requires enduring pressure on real yields, continued or stable central bank demand, or a material weakening of the dollar. From a contrarian angle, periods of consolidation like the present often present asymmetric opportunity for investors who can tolerate headline noise and focus on macro regime shifts rather than tactical price swings. We also note the increasing role of ETFs in setting near-term price floors; a contraction in ETF holdings would be a more meaningful bearish signal than a single-week pullback.

For institutional allocators, the relevant question is not whether gold will return to prior highs, but whether its risk-return profile within a diversified portfolio remains attractive relative to alternatives (sovereign duration, inflation-linked bonds, and select equities). We recommend monitoring three actionable metrics: (1) shifts in 10-year real yields, (2) net ETF flows on a rolling 3-month basis, and (3) central bank purchase cadence reported quarterly by the World Gold Council. Detailed scenario analysis at Fazen projects that a 50-basis-point decline in real yields could drive a mid-single-digit percentage increase in gold prices within six months, other factors held constant.

(See related perspectives on macro drivers and commodities on [Fazen insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and our commodities research hub [Commodities Research](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).)

Bottom Line

Gold’s pause on March 24, 2026 reflects consolidation after a substantial geopolitical-driven rally but does not, in our assessment, invalidate the structural support for the metal; real yields and central bank behavior remain the critical variables to monitor. Continued vigilance on volatility, ETF flows, and macro inflation expectations will determine whether the pause evolves into a deeper correction or a staged continuation of the uptrend.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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