Why Gold Is Struggling
Gold hit an all-time high of $5,600/oz just months ago. Since the Iran war started, it's dropped to around $4,500. For the world's supposed safe haven, something doesn't add up.
01What Gold Is Actually Doing
Gold hit an all-time high. A war started. And then gold fell. Make it make sense.
Just to set the scene: gold hit an all-time high of around $5,600/oz in late January 2026. In the early days of the US-Israel-Iran war, it pushed up to roughly $5,400/oz on the initial panic move. Since then, it's nosedived to around $4,500/oz, with a brief touch below $4,200 along the way.
Gold is often described as the ultimate safe-haven asset — the one thing you can hold when everything else falls apart. So when a major Middle East war breaks out, the instinct is to expect gold to rally hard. Instead, it's down more than 20% from its peak.
Gold is supposed to be a safe haven. Wars are supposed to send investors scrambling for safety. But since the Iran war started in late February, gold has dropped roughly 20% from its all-time high. The question is why — and the answer is simpler than it looks once you understand what gold is actually competing against.
02Gold Has A Competitor
Here's the thing most retail investors miss: gold doesn't trade in isolation.
When large institutional investors want to park money somewhere safe, they're choosing between two options. Gold is only one of them. The other is US Treasuries — government bonds that are also considered virtually risk-free, with one critical difference: they actually pay you a yield.
When bond yields are low — as they were in 2020–2021 — gold wins easily. Why accept a 0.5% Treasury yield when gold might rip 30% in a year? But when yields rise, the math changes. Every percentage point you earn on a Treasury is opportunity cost you're absorbing by holding gold instead. When bonds pay more, money rotates out of gold.
When the 10-year Treasury yield sits at 0.5% or 1%, there's almost no cost to holding gold instead of bonds. The opportunity cost — what you give up by not owning bonds — is negligible. In this environment, gold tends to outperform because the real yield on bonds (after inflation) is often negative.
This is what drove gold from ~$1,500 in early 2020 to over $2,000 by mid-2020, as central banks slashed rates to zero during COVID. And it's what pushed gold to $5,600 before this war started.
When the 10-year Treasury pays 4.4% — risk-free, guaranteed by the US government — the calculus flips. Now you're giving up 4.4% per year to hold an asset that generates no income at all. That's a real, measurable cost, and large institutions respond by rotating out of gold into bonds.
This is exactly what's happening now. The Iran war has pushed yields up, creating a headwind for gold that war-panic demand can't fully offset.
03Why the War Is Pushing Yields Up (Not Down)
This is the counterintuitive part. War normally sends yields lower. Not this time.
Normally, war creates fear, which sends money into US Treasuries as a flight to safety, which pushes bond prices up and yields down. That's the conventional playbook. But the Iran war is doing the opposite — because the mechanism of this particular crisis flows through oil and inflation.
The 10-year Treasury yield has moved from about 3.9% just before the war to 4.4% today — roughly 50 basis points in a matter of weeks. In bond market terms, that's a very large move in a very short time. It's the market pricing in persistent inflation, and persistent inflation is exactly what creates a headwind for gold.
Timeline of the Gold Price Drop
04The Part That's Still Holding Up
Central banks are buying gold at a pace never seen before — and they're not stopping.
Here's where the story gets interesting. While ETF investors and speculators have been dumping gold to chase Treasury yields, there's another buyer in the market that moves slower, thinks longer, and doesn't care about the 10-year yield: central banks.
The volume of central bank buying has more than doubled since 2022. For three years running, purchases have exceeded 1,000 tonnes annually. By comparison, the 2010–2021 average was 473 tonnes. The World Gold Council's 2025 survey found that 95% of central banks expect global official gold reserves to rise over the next 12 months — the highest reading in the survey's history. A record 43% said they plan to add to holdings, with zero planning a reduction.
China is the clearest example of this structural shift in action. The People's Bank of China has now added gold for 14 consecutive months — one of the longest unbroken buying streaks on record for a major central bank. Poland, Kazakhstan, and a cohort of emerging-market central banks from Czechia to Ghana have been doing the same. These buyers aren't reacting to short-term yield moves. They're repositioning gold as a long-term strategic reserve asset.
The catalyst for this wave of central bank buying was February 2022 — when roughly $300 billion of Russian central bank assets were frozen overnight following the invasion of Ukraine. That was a wake-up call for every central bank in the world holding large foreign currency reserves. Foreign currency reserves can be seized; physical gold sitting in your own vault cannot. This shifted gold from a "hedge" to a strategic national security asset for a large part of the world.
Poland alone has stated plans to push its holdings from 550 tonnes to 700 tonnes for "national security reasons." This is a slower-moving but far more durable demand source than the speculators currently dumping ETFs to buy Treasuries.
05Has Gold Failed As A Safe Haven?
Not really. But the framing most people use is too simple.
Gold is not a magic crisis hedge that automatically goes up every time something bad happens. It's an asset that responds to specific variables — mainly real yields, the dollar, and inflation expectations. When all three move against it simultaneously, even a major war can't rescue the price.
Decades of data still support gold's safe-haven reputation in the broader sense. In 8 of the last 11 major equity sell-offs, gold went up alongside falling stocks. But "safe haven" doesn't mean "uncorrelated to everything." The specific mechanism matters enormously.
"When the very thing causing the crisis — oil-driven inflation — is also pushing yields and the dollar higher, gold gets caught in the crossfire."
That's the situation right now.The Iran war is not a "normal" geopolitical shock that simply spooks investors into safety assets. It's a commodity shock that creates inflation, which creates yield pressure, which creates a direct headwind for gold. The war is simultaneously the reason people want gold and the reason they can't afford to hold it.
06How To Think About Gold From Here
Short-term headwind. Long-term structural story still very much intact.
Short-term: as long as the Iran war drags on and keeps oil elevated, gold faces a persistent high-yield headwind. A 10-year Treasury paying 4.4% risk-free is a significant opportunity cost. Unless yields fall — which requires either a ceasefire that breaks the oil-inflation loop, or a recession that forces the Fed to cut — the pressure on gold continues.
Long-term: the central bank bid is real, persistent, and structural. Poland, China, and the broader emerging-market cohort are buying gold to hold it, not trade it. They're not responding to 10-year yields. They're responding to geopolitical fragmentation, concerns about US fiscal sustainability, and the 2022 lesson that foreign currency reserves can be frozen in a weekend.
The key reversal signal for gold is the 10-year Treasury yield. If it starts falling — because a ceasefire arrives and oil drops, or because the US economy weakens — gold's opportunity cost collapses and the structural central bank demand becomes the dominant force again. Watch the 10-year yield before watching the gold price itself. That's the leading indicator here.
The lesson here isn't that gold is broken. It's that the framing "gold = safe haven, war = gold goes up" is too simple. Gold trades against bonds, the dollar, and real rates — and right now it's losing on all three. For gold to resume its structural uptrend, those forces need to reverse. The central bank floor is real. The long-term case remains intact. But this specific type of crisis — where war drives inflation rather than deflation — is precisely the environment where the yield trade wins in the short run.