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CHANGE CURRENCY:

Price Synergies of Gold and Oil Muddy the Water

Original Analysis | SchiffGold | 25 Mar, 2026

Gold and oil price are connected uniquely through several different mechanisms. The recent conflict in Iran has created a massive international oil shortage and thrown the FX markets and gold prices around dramatically. While international tensions are often good for the gold market, in this situation, the price of gold experienced some dramatic downward price action. The technical analysis does also not look good for gold in the short term. However, many of the conditions behind the drop in gold’s price are extremely unique and do not change the metal’s long-term trajectory. The higher gas price and greater economic uncertainty increase the value of the dollar through both demand for safety and a need for more dollars to buy oil with. This increased value of the dollar allows gold to sink in terms of dollar value. If the blocking of the strait of Hormuz and the oil shortage are perceived to be short-term, Gold will not gain anything from its role as a safe haven. However, if the war drags out and the oil shortage continues, gold will gradually regain ground as it’s stability will gradually overpower the negative currency effects. While higher oil prices can drive down the price of gold in the short term, the instability the heightened prices will cause, and the increase of perverse debt incentives will ultimately allow gold to rebound.

The international gas market is dominated by the dollar. While the dollar has continued its downward trajectory, the oil market still requires enough dollars that it can have a significant effect when nations are scrambling to stockpile while the price is already high. An increased volume of sales, particularly among US adjacent countries that are not as energy independent as China has given the dollar a momentary upward price shock. Additionally, in geopolitically tenuous times, people still flock to the dollar out of instinct because of what it once was. People still remember when the dollar was a more viable stable store of value, and in their fear they flock to the familiar, even as oil prices and cause it to inflate. The recent increase in use of the dollar has driven gold prices down, but without a change in the structural trend, there will not be a dramatic stabilization of the dollar or decrease in gold price.

commodities dollar strength energy markets forex markets gold inflation Iran conflict Oil Prices safe haven stagflation