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Gold Just Hit $5,400. Here's Why Your Portfolio Should Care.

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Briefs Finance
Published Mar 2, 2026
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Stack of cash and coins, a gold safe, a rising green arrow, a globe, and a toy tank on a map—illustrating how your portfolio could grow by $5,400; BriefsFinance logo in the corner.
Summary:
  • Gold briefly touched $5,400 per ounce Monday as US-Israel strikes on Iran rattled markets.
  • JPMorgan sees a short-term price spike of 5–10%, but warns gains can fade fast.
  • The bank's year-end target for gold is $6,300 — nearly $1,000 above where it sits now.

Gold hit $5,400 an ounce Monday morning. That's not a typo — and it's not just traders being dramatic.

What Happened

Over the weekend, US and Israeli forces struck Iran. Iran struck back. Markets opened Monday in a full-on scramble for safety, and gold — the world's oldest panic button — got slammed.

Futures briefly touched $5,400 before pulling back. By midday, gold was trading around $5,327, still up more than 1.5% on the day and sitting about $200 below its all-time high set back in January.

It was gold's ninth straight month of gains. Year to date, the metal is up 21%.

Why Gold Moves When the World Gets Scary

Gold is what investors call a "safe-haven" asset. When stocks start dropping and the news gets ugly, people move money into gold because it tends to hold its value when everything else is sliding.

That's exactly what happened Monday. US stocks opened lower. Oil surged. And gold — already riding a months-long rally fueled by central bank buying, falling interest rates, and a weaker dollar — got another big push.

JPMorgan analysts expect the conflict to add a "risk premium" of more than 5% to 10% to gold prices in the near-term. But they added a caveat: geopolitical price spikes "can be sharp but hard to sustain."

If the conflict cools, or if investors need to sell gold to cover losses elsewhere, prices could pull back just as fast.

What Comes Next

The bigger story isn't just this weekend's strikes. JPMorgan is forecasting gold at $6,300 per ounce by the end of 2026 — not because of Iran, but because of structural forces that aren't going away anytime soon.

Central banks are still buying gold at a record pace. The US dollar is weak. Interest rates are falling. And deficits are rising. All of those things tend to push gold higher over time.

Robin Brooks, a senior fellow at the Brookings Institution, put it simply: "2026 is looking like 2025 on steroids."

The short-term spike may fade. The long-term trend may not.

Disclosure

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