Iran-Israel Conflict Sent Gold to ₹1.71 Lakh/10g — Here's What Happens to the Price If Tensions Ease
Gold screamed to ₹1.71 lakh as missiles flew over the Middle East — but now the same conflict threatening to push it higher could also trigger its sharpest single-week crash of 2026. History has a brutal answer for what happens next.
The Week That Shook Bullion Markets
Indian gold investors woke up to a dramatically different market last week. On March 3, 2026, gold prices hit an all-time high of $5,417 per ounce globally, with domestic rates in many Indian cities trading close to ₹1.71 lakh per 10 grams. For context, that is a level few analysts had pencilled in for 2026. The trigger? An escalating military confrontation in the Middle East that rattled every asset class on the planet.
The immediate catalyst came on February 28, 2026, when coordinated US and Israeli strikes on Iranian targets triggered panic buying across precious metals markets. Gold futures surged over 2% in a single session, pushing prices from approximately $5,100 to over $5,300 per ounce. Within days, the yellow metal had its most dramatic week in modern financial history — and Indian retail investors, jewellery buyers, and SIP-based gold ETF holders were caught squarely in the middle.
Why Gold Spiked: The Three Drivers Behind the Surge
To understand where gold goes next, you first need to understand why it ran so hard in the first place. This wasn’t a simple supply-demand equation — three distinct forces collided simultaneously.
1. The Safe-Haven Rush
Wars and crises send money pouring into assets that hold value when everything else is uncertain. The escalation in tensions between the United States and Iran sparked a bid for haven assets, with investors scooping up gold and the US dollar as places to park their cash during the turmoil. Gold’s role here is structural — it has no counterparty risk, cannot be devalued by government decree, and has held purchasing power across centuries of conflict.
2. The Strait of Hormuz Factor
The fallout from the strikes effectively shut the Strait of Hormuz, a critical global chokepoint through which nearly 20% of the world’s oil supply passes. As a result, crude oil prices spiked aggressively, reigniting fears of a fresh inflation wave across global economies. Inflation, even anticipated inflation, is rocket fuel for gold. When oil costs more, everything costs more — and that erodes the real value of cash, pushing institutional money toward hard assets like bullion.
3. India’s Double Vulnerability: Rupee + Import Costs
For Indian investors specifically, India imports more than 80% of its crude requirements, making it vulnerable to Middle East instability. A weaker rupee compounds this directly: when the dollar strengthens against the rupee — as it inevitably does during geopolitical risk-off episodes — the landed cost of imported gold in India climbs, even if global prices were to stay flat. This is why domestic gold prices often overshoot international movements.
The Numbers: How Sharp Was the Rally — And the Fall?
The rally was historic. Gold tested the all-time record of $5,594.82 set on January 29, 2026, with the Iran-US conflict providing fresh upward momentum. In India, gold in the international market slipped nearly 5% to hover around $5,050 per ounce on Tuesday, as investors increasingly favoured the US dollar over bullion as a safe-haven asset amid escalating geopolitical tensions.
But even before that partial correction, the domestic market had moved sharply. Over two sessions, gold fell by ₹30,700 per 24K per 100 grams and ₹28,000 per 22K per 100 grams, reflecting a sharp correction in prices. These are not small movements — this kind of intraday and inter-session volatility is typically only seen during financial crises or major geopolitical shocks. Retail buyers who purchased at or near the ₹1.71 lakh peak are now sitting on paper losses.
What History Tells Us About Gold After Conflict
This is the most important section for investors making decisions today. Gold's relationship with geopolitical conflict follows a remarkably consistent pattern across decades — and the Iran-Israel situation has already provided us with a live case study.
Gold prices jumped after Iran launched a major attack on Israel in April 2024, briefly reaching new highs as investors looked for safety — but gold pulled back within a few days. After Israel declared war on Hamas in October 2023, gold rallied over 5% in the weeks that followed. The pattern is clear: initial spike, followed by consolidation or retreat as markets process whether the conflict will escalate into something structural.
More directly relevant: the Israel-Iran ceasefire announced on June 23, 2025 marked a pivotal moment for gold investors — as tensions eased, gold prices tumbled to near two-week lows, shedding 0.6% to $3,340 an ounce, a stark reversal from its 28% year-to-date gains fuelled by fears of Middle East escalation.
We have already seen this movie once in 2025. Gold prices fell by 2% after Trump announced that ceasefire. That was when gold was trading at a fraction of today's levels. At ₹1.60–1.65 lakh per 10 grams, even a 2–3% de-escalation pullback translates into ₹3,200–4,950 per 10 grams evaporating from your portfolio overnight.
What Happens to Gold If Tensions Ease Now?
Let us be direct about what investors genuinely need to know: a ceasefire or meaningful de-escalation today would almost certainly pull gold prices down sharply in the short term. Here's why, and by how much.
The "War Premium" Will Deflate
An unexpected ceasefire or de-escalation signal could trigger a quick pullback in gold prices. Analysts at Zaner Metals put a finer point on this after the 2025 ceasefire: "The de-escalation of tensions in the Middle East is the primary factor weighing on gold. The safe-haven bid has diminished and the market is in more of a risk-on mode," with key support identified at $3,300 and stronger support at $3,250. Scale that logic to today's elevated price levels, and Indian prices could retreat meaningfully from ₹1.60–1.67 lakh per 10 grams.
The Rupee Would Recover
Past geopolitical episodes — including the 2013 taper tantrum, the 2020 pandemic shock, and the 2022 Ukraine crisis — led to temporary rupee weakness but not structural damage. A calmer Middle East would see the dollar index ease, which directly reduces the import cost of gold in rupee terms and exerts additional downward pressure on MCX gold prices.
Oil Prices Would Drop
The oil market is on a twisted road to abundance, with analysts believing we are still amid a temporary oil price bounce, with a risk premium lifting prices for weeks rather than months. f Strait of Hormuz traffic normalises after a ceasefire, crude could retreat sharply, bringing with it the inflation fears that drove part of gold's rally.
Floor, Not Freefall: The Structural Case for Gold Remains Strong
Here is the crucial nuance that separates informed gold investors from panic sellers. Even before the US-Iran military escalation, gold markets were experiencing a powerful bull run that had already delivered approximately 22% gains year-to-date, benefiting from persistent inflation concerns, central bank buying, currency debasement fears, and ongoing geopolitical tensions.
Maintaining a 5–10% strategic allocation to gold — through ETFs, Sovereign Gold Bonds, or systematic accumulation — can help cushion equity volatility without materially diluting long-term growth potential. A de-escalation dip, if it comes, is historically a buying opportunity in a structurally bullish market — not a signal to exit entirely.
Three Scenarios and What They Mean for Your Gold Holdings
Scenario 1 — Ceasefire Within 2–4 Weeks: Expect MCX gold to drop ₹3,000–6,000 per 10 grams from current levels. The war premium deflates, the rupee recovers partially, and sentiment shifts risk-on. Long-term holders should stay invested; fresh buyers may get a better entry point.
Scenario 2 — Conflict Prolongs Beyond 6 Weeks: Under the assumption of a sustained closure of the Strait of Hormuz and a jump in oil prices from $70 to $85 a barrel, regional inflation in Asia could rise by about 0.7 percentage points, according to Goldman Sachs — keeping gold well-bid. Indian prices may retest ₹1.70–1.75 lakh.
Scenario 3 — Wider Regional Escalation: If instability continues, gold could retest its 52-week high and potentially move toward ₹2,00,000 per 10 grams. This is a tail-risk scenario, but one that cannot be ruled out given the volatility of current events.
What Should Indian Investors Do Right Now?
Having covered Indian financial markets and banking for over a decade, here is my assessment: this is not the time for panic buying or panic selling. Both reactions have historically destroyed wealth.
If you bought gold at ₹1.60 lakh or below, you are still in a comfortable position even if prices correct. If you are considering fresh purchases, wait for the conflict situation to clarify — a genuine de-escalation could offer a much better entry point in the ₹1.50–1.55 lakh range.
For those with SIP-based investments in Gold ETFs or Sovereign Gold Bonds, continue your systematic approach. The structural case for gold — central bank buying, dollar uncertainty, inflation hedging — remains intact regardless of how the Middle East situation resolves.
Key support levels to watch on MCX: ₹1,58,000–1,60,000 per 10 grams represents a strong technical floor. A sustained breach below this would signal meaningful de-escalation has been priced in, and that range could represent an accumulation opportunity for long-term investors.
The Bottom Line
Gold's surge to ₹1.71 lakh per 10 grams was a crisis-driven premium layered on top of an already strong structural bull market. While a ceasefire offers a tactical pullback opportunity, the Middle East's history of fragile agreements means gold remains a strategic hedge — not an asset to discard.
De-escalation will hurt gold prices in the near term. But the world that exists on the other side of this conflict — one of higher inflation, a more multipolar geopolitical order, and continued central bank gold accumulation — remains fundamentally supportive of the yellow metal for the medium to long term.
Watch the Strait of Hormuz. Watch the dollar index. Watch MCX's ₹1,58,000 support. Those three data points will tell you more about where Indian gold prices are headed than any headline will.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice. Gold investments carry market risk. Please consult a SEBI-registered advisor before making investment decisions.
With over 15 years of experience in Banking, investment banking, personal finance, or financial planning, Dkush has a knack for breaking down complex financial concepts into actionable, easy-to-understand advice. A MBA finance and a lifelong learner, Dkush is committed to helping readers achieve financial independence through smart budgeting, investing, and wealth-building strategies, Follow Dailyfinancial.in for practical tips and a roadmap to financial success!
