Gold, Oil, and Bonds: Three Markets Sending the Same Signal

Oil reacted to the disruption. Bonds responded to the cost. Gold is now reflecting something deeper: a fading sense of confidence.

There is an old hotel tactic used during times of disruption. When one room becomes unusable, guests are relocated to another. If that room develops problems, they are moved again. No one actually leaves the building. They simply shift from floor to floor, with each move marketed as a solution while the underlying issue remains unchanged.

That pattern mirrors market behavior since the Iran conflict escalated in February.

Investors have not discovered genuine safety. Instead, capital has rotated from one source of unease to another. It first rushed into oil, then retreated from bonds, moved away from gold, and eventually returned to gold once the initial shock faded. What was expected to be a safe-haven trade turned into a continuous cycle of repositioning.

The headline story is energy. The more important story is confidence. Gold’s resilience suggests investors are increasingly questioning not just economic fundamentals, but the reliability of the systems meant to provide stability.

The First Domino to Fall

Oil was always destined to react before any other major asset class. The conflict initially impacted the physical foundations of global commerce long before it affected investor sentiment. As concerns grew over the flow of crude through the Strait of Hormuz, markets were forced to account for potential disruptions to one of the world’s most critical energy corridors.

The response was largely driven by fundamentals, not panic. Traders were not pricing fear; they were pricing reduced supply.

Energy underpins nearly every sector of the economy. From transportation and manufacturing to agriculture, aviation, and logistics, economic activity depends on reliable and affordable fuel. When oil prices surge, the effects rarely remain isolated within energy markets. Higher costs gradually work their way through supply chains, ultimately showing up in consumer prices across a wide range of goods and services.

That is why crude oil moved first. It was responding to an immediate threat to supply, making it the first market to reflect the consequences of disruption.

Trade Volume - Strait of Hormuz - Brent Price

Gold’s Shakeout

Gold’s decline in March caught many investors off guard because it seemed to contradict the usual geopolitical playbook.

The conventional expectation was straightforward: rising geopolitical tensions drive investors toward safe-haven assets, providing support for gold.

Yet gold moved lower.

The reason was far less dramatic than the headlines suggested. In its early stages, the Iran conflict was viewed primarily as an inflationary shock rather than a broad risk-off event. As oil prices surged, bond yields climbed as investors reassessed inflation prospects and the likelihood of tighter monetary policy. Higher real yields and a stronger US dollar created headwinds for precious metals, while investors seeking cash raised liquidity wherever they could.

Gold, being one of the world’s most liquid assets, became a source of funds.

That distinction matters. The sell-off was not a rejection of gold’s role as a store of value. Instead, it reflected a temporary rush for liquidity as markets adjusted to a rapidly changing environment.

Price action supports that interpretation. Gold retraced sharply toward the $4,100 area, bringing its 200-day moving average into focus. However, the longer-term trend remained intact, with the 200-day average continuing to slope higher throughout the correction. Rather than signaling a structural breakdown, the decline resembled a healthy reset within an ongoing bull market.

XAU/USD 200 DMA Chart

Bonds Started Asking Questions

While much of the market’s attention was directed toward oil and gold, the bond market was sending a more significant message.

Traditionally, government bonds have served as the ultimate safe haven during periods of geopolitical and economic uncertainty. Yet this time, bond yields rose sharply. Rather than benefiting from a flight to safety, sovereign debt markets began demanding a higher premium from investors.

That development carries important implications.

Conflict raises government spending. Energy shocks fuel inflation. At the same time, many governments are already burdened with debt levels that would have been considered extraordinary only a few decades ago. Investors recognize that financing these obligations requires increasing amounts of borrowing, often at a time when confidence in long-term fiscal stability is becoming less certain.

The response has been telling. While private foreign investors continued allocating capital to US assets, foreign central banks and official institutions quietly moved in the opposite direction, becoming net sellers. Short-term capital remained engaged, but long-term reserve holders appeared increasingly cautious.

The distinction is important. Fast-moving capital often follows opportunity. Reserve capital prioritizes stability and preservation. When the latter begins reducing exposure, it can signal deeper concerns about risk, valuation, and future policy credibility.

For investors, that is a message worth paying attention to.

Foreign Holdings of US Treasuries

Why Money Is Returning to Gold

The seemingly erratic rotation of capital begins to make more sense when viewed through a broader framework.

Oil attracted investors because the supply disruption was immediate and tangible.

Bonds lost favour because the fiscal and financing consequences quickly became apparent.

Gold weakened because markets briefly prioritized liquidity above all else.

Yet capital eventually found its way back to gold because gold stands apart from both sets of risks.

Unlike oil, gold is not dependent on vulnerable supply chains or critical shipping routes. Unlike government bonds, it does not rely on policymakers maintaining market confidence or managing growing debt burdens. Gold carries no promise to repay, no maturity date, and no counterparty exposure.

That distinction helps explain why central banks continue adding to their gold reserves even as prices rise. Their purchases are not necessarily a bet on economic perfection or imminent crisis. Rather, they reflect a desire to diversify reserves away from a financial system that increasingly depends on expanding debt and ongoing policy intervention.

The Inflation Markets Have Yet to Fully Price

So far, investors have focused primarily on the most visible consequences of the conflict:

  • Higher oil prices.
  • More expensive fuel.
  • Rising inflation expectations.

The deeper effects are likely to emerge more gradually.

Elevated diesel costs increase transportation expenses. Higher fertiliser prices raise agricultural production costs. More expensive natural gas pressures industrial output. Delayed planting decisions can reduce future crop yields. Food inflation often arrives long after the original energy shock has faded from the headlines.

This is why the broader economic impact may still be underestimated. Oil prices can quickly reflect a supply disruption, but they do not immediately capture the ripple effects that spread throughout the economy over time.

If the conflict persists, the global economy could increasingly face conditions associated with stagflation — slower growth, stubborn inflation, and mounting fiscal strain. Such an environment tends to challenge bond markets and create uncertainty for energy markets.

Historically, however, it has often strengthened the case for gold, particularly when investors become more concerned about preserving purchasing power and reducing exposure to financial and policy-related risks.

G7 Long-Term Borrowing Costs

The Morning After

A ceasefire or peace agreement would almost certainly spark a relief rally across financial markets. Oil prices would likely retreat as supply concerns fade, bond yields could ease as risk premiums decline, and gold might face short-term profit-taking as investors unwind defensive positions.

However, the end of hostilities would not instantly reverse the economic consequences already set in motion.

Energy inventories would need to be replenished. Damaged infrastructure would require repair. Supply chains disrupted by months of uncertainty would take time to recover. Governments would still be left managing the additional debt and financing costs accumulated during the conflict.

Peace may eliminate the immediate catalyst, but it cannot erase the inflationary pressures that have already filtered through the economy, nor can it remove the growing questions surrounding fiscal sustainability and sovereign balance sheets.

The Room Investors Keep Returning To

The hotel analogy remains relevant.

Capital first crowded into oil as markets focused on supply disruption. Confidence in bonds weakened as investors began confronting the fiscal implications. Gold was temporarily abandoned when liquidity became the market’s highest priority.

Yet each time investors have left, they have eventually found their way back.

Not because gold is the most exciting asset.

Not because it offers income or yield.

But because it remains one of the few assets that exists independently of another party’s obligation.

Stocks depend on earnings. Bonds depend on repayment. Currencies depend on policy credibility. Gold depends on none of these.

That distinction becomes increasingly important when markets shift from pricing a crisis to evaluating its long-term consequences.

Many investors still view the current environment primarily through the lens of war. Gold appears to be responding to something broader: the aftermath.

Oil has priced the disruption. Bonds are pricing the financial burden. Gold is increasingly pricing the slow erosion of confidence that often follows periods of rising debt, persistent inflation, and expanding fiscal commitments.

If that interpretation proves correct, the most significant market story may not be the conflict itself.

It may be what the conflict reveals about the foundations of the financial system long after the headlines fade.

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