
Spot gold rose 3.5% to close at $4,668.06 an ounce in New York.
Gold logged its worst month since the global financial crisis despite climbing for a third session Tuesday on signs the US and Iran are open to ending the war in West Asia.
The US dollar and Treasury yields retreated further on reports that both countries are signalling an opening towards a resolution. That helped boost bullion as much as 3.9 per cent to the highest in more than a week before closing 3.5 per cent higher at $4,668.06 an ounce, translating into a 12 per cent decline in March.
Earlier, the Wall Street Journal reported US President Donald Trump would be willing to exit the conflict even with the Strait of Hormuz largely closed. Trump also called on other nations to wrest control of the vital oil and gas transit route as Iran maintained missile fire across the Persian Gulf, expressing his frustration that the monthlong war remains unresolved. Iranian state media reported, meanwhile, that Pesident Masoud Pezeshkian said the country is ready to end the war while reiterating Tehran’s demands.
Despite a strong rebound in the past few days, bullion still registered its worst month since 2008 as the West Asia conflict has upended global markets and triggered concerns about a simultaneous spike in inflation and slowdown in economic growth.
Traders had been betting that global central banks might need to raise interest rates to contain elevated price pressures, but reversed course Monday after Jerome Powell said longer-term inflation expectations remain anchored. Higher rates are a headwind for bullion as it doesn’t pay interest. Meanwhile, gold also suffered forced selling tied to the equities rout during the first few weeks of the war, which has entered its second month.
‘Trading on headlines’
“Markets are trading very much on headlines, when in reality there appears to have been very little change,” said David Wilson, director of commodity strategy at BNP Paribas SA. “What this does suggest is, however, that if there is a peace deal in the offing, gold will rally sharply. Conversely, if there is some form of land invasion by US forces, we can expect gold to do the opposite and trend lower.”
Separately, US data showed consumer confidence unexpectedly rose in March on slightly more upbeat views of business and labor-market conditions. Job openings fell and hiring slowed in February, pointing to cooler labor demand before the war triggered additional uncertainty.
Spot gold rose 3.5 per cent to close at $4,668.06 an ounce in New York. Silver climbed 7.3 per cent to $75.17 an ounce. Platinum and palladium also advanced. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.6 per cent.
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Published on April 1, 2026
