
US-Iran Ceasefire & Market Impact 2026 | By GivTrade Analyst Team
When the United States and Israel launched strikes on Iran on February 28, 2026, global markets didn’t just react — they were shaken to their core.
A six-week conflict, the shutdown of the Strait of Hormuz, and the biggest energy disruption since the 1970s sent shockwaves across commodities, metals, and forex markets.
Now, with a fragile two-week ceasefire brokered by Pakistan, investors are asking one key question:
Is this a return to normal — or just a temporary pause before more volatility?
Gold entered the conflict at record highs, reaching $5,602 per ounce on January 29, 2026, after a massive pre-war rally.
But when the war began, something unexpected happened:
Despite its reputation as a safe haven, gold dropped due to three major forces:
Rising oil prices fueled inflation fears, pushing the Federal Reserve to keep interest rates higher. A stronger dollar weighed heavily on gold.
Gold had already surged nearly 24% pre-war. Investors sold positions to lock in gains and raise liquidity.
In times of stress, traders sell what they can, not what they want — and gold was one of the most liquid assets.
As ceasefire talks progressed:
This divergence suggests underlying strength remains intact
The recent correction may already represent a buying opportunity
Silver experienced even more extreme volatility than gold.
Silver’s dual role hurt it:
As recession fears rose, industrial demand expectations weakened — accelerating the selloff.
On April 8:
Key level to watch: $76 support
If the ceasefire holds, silver could retest $88 and beyond
Oil was the epicenter of the crisis — driven by disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz, which carries ~20% of global oil supply.
Following ceasefire news:
Biggest drop since the Gulf War
Even after the crash:
This is not a peace agreement — just a short-term pause.
Facilities like Ras Laffan LNG suffered major disruptions, with recovery timelines of 3–5 years.
Countries like Saudi Arabia, Iraq, and the UAE shut in millions of barrels per day. Restarting supply will take time.
Oil volatility is far from over.
The US Dollar Index dropped toward 100 as ceasefire optimism grew.
Energy shocks pushed inflation higher:
This keeps the macro environment tight.
The ceasefire provides short-term relief — not long-term resolution.
The downside risk remains significant.
The US-Iran ceasefire is a pause, not a solution.
The forces that drove:
The next two weeks could define the trajectory for the rest of 2026.
You can read our newsletter on LinkedIn: If the economy keeps surprising to the upside, how long can markets wait for rate cuts?