Why Oil and Gold Often Move Together During Conflict
Energy markets are particularly affected now.
Nick Cawley noted concerns over the Strait of Hormuz, a vital oil route, have pushed crude prices higher. Sharp oil rises from supply risks can lead to:
- Real interest rate expectations may shift.
- Currency markets can undergo volatility.
- Inflation expectations can increase.
Gold responds to all three factors above.
Rising inflation expectations can bolster gold’s value as a purchasing-power hedge. Shifts in real interest rates can influence the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets. Currency volatility can increase the appeal of assets not directly linked to sovereign balance sheets.
It is this combination of macroeconomic transmission mechanisms, rather than conflict itself, that often drives gold’s movement.
Volatility Versus Structural Demand
Short-term gold spikes reflect immediate risk-off sentiment. The key for investors is whether demand becomes structural.
Structural support for gold can come from:
- Sustained central bank buying
- Unrelenting inflation concerns
- Long-term geopolitical realignment
- Broader de-dollarisation trends
Temporary safe haven flows may fade once tensions ease, while structural reallocation tends to persist.
Grasping the distinction is key to measured decision-making.
Portfolio Resilience, Not Event Trading
It is important to avoid framing gold as a direct response to war. A governance-led investment approach treats gold as an element of a broader risk-management framework rather than as a reaction to headlines.
For many investors, gold sits within a wider capital preservation strategy that may include:
- Diversification away from concentrated equity exposure
- Decreasing dependence on single currencies
- Holding tangible assets outside the banking system