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Gold Rebounded As War Fears Lifted Safe-Haven Demand

Gold Rebounded As War Fears Lifted Safe-Haven Demand

Posted March 4, 2026 at 10:15 am

Finimize Newsroom
Finimize

A weaker dollar and escalating Middle East tensions steadied precious metals, while investors watched US jobs data and platinum deficits for the next catalyst.

What’s going on here?

Gold ticked up Wednesday as investors looked for safety amid escalating Middle East tensions, helped by a pause in the US dollar’s rise.

What does this mean?

Spot gold’s snapback after a steep prior-day drop shows how fast precious metals can swing when geopolitics, the dollar, and interest-rate expectations collide. A weaker dollar typically supports dollar-priced assets because they’re cheaper for non-US buyers. Now the next catalyst is US labor data: February’s ADP private payrolls beat forecasts but January was revised lower, while economists expect Friday’s nonfarm payrolls to cool versus January. If the data shifts expectations for Federal Reserve policy, that can quickly flow through to real yields and the greenback – and straight into gold.

Why should I care?

For markets: Gold is acting like a currency trade again.

Gold, silver, platinum, and palladium all rebounded after sharp losses, a sign traders are repositioning quickly. With the jobs report as the next macro checkpoint, a surprise that lifts the dollar or pushes rate-cut bets out could pressure metals, while weaker data can do the opposite. That’s why these assets can look like an inflation hedge one day and a rates-sensitive trade the next.

Zooming out: Not all precious metals are moving for the same reason.

Gold is being tugged around by safety flows, but platinum has a more structural driver: supply. The World Platinum Investment Council expects another market deficit in 2026, which would be the fourth straight year of shortfall. Persistent tightness can leave prices more vulnerable to disruptions at mines or sudden changes in industrial demand.

Originally Posted March 4, 2026 – Gold Rebounded As War Fears Lifted Safe-Haven Demand

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