Gold surged to $4,850/oz (+3.1%) post-ceasefire announcement, while oil briefly plunged below $100/barrel—but Bank of America warns prices could spike to $130+ if war resumes, and $200+ if Iran blocks the Strait of Hormuz.
Trump’s temporary halt to bombing is not a peace deal—Iran and Israel have not begun substantive negotiations, leaving markets vulnerable to sudden collapse if talks fail.
Eastern arbitrage (buying cheap gold/silver in the West and selling high in Asia) is breaking Western manipulation, pushing gold toward $3,000–$5,000/oz (Peter Schiff’s prediction).
Even before the ceasefire, Fed officials signaled rate hikes may persist, yet gold’s resilience shows investors hedging against geopolitical and monetary instability.
Short-term market euphoria is misleading—gold’s dip below $3,300 earlier this year was a prime accumulation point and current dips (e.g., $50–$100 drops) are temporary before long-term surges.
Gold prices soared above $4,850 an ounce—a staggering 3.1% spike—following President Donald Trump’s announcement of a two-week ceasefire between the U.S. and Iran, a temporary reprieve in a conflict that has rattled global markets. The precious metal’s rally extended gains from the previous session, fueled by cautious optimism that the pause in hostilities could pave the way for broader peace talks. However, seasoned analysts warn that this ceasefire is fragile, merely a pause in bombing rather than a lasting resolution, and markets remain vulnerable to sudden reversals if negotiations collapse.
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