Abstract:Gold prices hold firmly above the historically high $5,000 mark as US geopolitical warnings regarding Iran fuel safe-haven demand. Energy markets remain tense as traders eye supply chain disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz.

Commodities are dominating flows in early weekly trading, with Spot Gold (XAU/USD) successfully defending the psychological $5,000 per ounce barrier. The precious metal is benefitting from a classic “flight to safety” bid, insulated from the broader volatility in equity markets by escalating geopolitical friction in the Middle East.
The US government has issued an urgent navigation warning to US-flagged merchant vessels, advising them to avoid Iranian waters near the strategic Strait of Hormuz. This development follows reports that Iran may be willing to dilute its uranium stockpiles only if all sanctions are lifted—a condition unlikely to be met immediately by Western powers.
While Gold holds the high ground, equity markets are showing signs of schizophrenia. US technology stocks, particularly software giants like Oracle (+10%), have staged a rebound as analysts push back against “AI doom” narratives. However, this risk-on sentiment in equities has not bled over into currency or commodity markets, which remain fixated on macro risks.
Investors are effectively hedging their bets: buying the dip in high-growth tech stocks while simultaneously holding record amounts of Gold to insure against geopolitical blowups and US labor market deterioration.
With the “delayed” NFP report and inflation data due later this week, Gold's ability to hold above $5,000 suggests strong underlying institutional accumulation. A weak US jobs print, combined with current geopolitical tensions, could provide the catalyst for XAU/USD to retest its recent record highs near $5,598.