Gold and Safe Havens
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When the world gets scared, money goes to the same places every time. Understanding where and how fast tells you how scared the market actually is.
Gold
Gold is the primary fear gauge right now. It’s doing something historic.
Price action:
- Start of 2026: approx. $4,300/oz
- Feb 28 (pre-strike): approx. $5,100/oz
- Mar 1: $5,278/oz
- Mar 2 early trading: $5,296/oz (new all-time high)
- Up 1,000 in under 60 days.
Why this matters beyond just gold:
- Seven consecutive monthly gains — longest streak in over a decade
- Central banks have been buying approx. 585 tonnes per quarter (per JP Morgan)
- This isn’t just retail panic — sovereign wealth funds and central banks are accumulating
- JP Morgan target: $6,300/oz by December 2026
- If conflict persists: analysts see 6,000 near term
What gold is telling us: The market does not believe this conflict will be short. Sustained central bank buying + retail panic + geopolitical premium = gold hasn’t finished moving.
US Treasuries
The classic safe haven — but with a twist this time.
Short-term: Treasuries rallying as investors flee to safety. Bond prices up, yields down.
The contradiction: If oil stays high, inflation rises. If inflation rises, bonds lose value long-term. So Treasuries are a safe haven today but could become a trap tomorrow.
Who’s buying anyway: Institutional investors need somewhere to park cash during risk-off events. Treasuries are the most liquid market in the world. Even if the inflation math is bad, the liquidity math is compelling.
Buffett’s tell: Berkshire’s $382B is parked in short-term Treasuries at 3.6%. He’s getting paid to wait. See who-to-watch.
Currencies
Strengthening (safe havens):
- US Dollar — surging as global reserve currency flight-to-safety
- Swiss Franc — traditional neutral safe haven, edging higher
Weakening:
- Emerging market currencies down 0.5%, second straight session
- Philippine peso and Taiwan dollar worst hit among Asian peers
- Any oil-importing EM currency is under pressure
The dollar paradox: The US started the war, yet the dollar strengthens. This is because the dollar is the world’s reserve currency. In a crisis, everyone needs dollars to settle trades, pay debts, and buy oil. The worse the crisis, the stronger the dollar.
Crypto: Not a Safe Haven
Bitcoin’s behavior during this crisis is instructive:
- Dropped from 63K within hours of the strikes
- Largest single-day liquidation event of 2026
- Brief recovery to approx. 66K again as conflict intensified
- Acting as a risk asset, not a store of value
Why: In a real crisis, people sell liquid assets to raise cash. Bitcoin is liquid and trades 24/7, making it the first thing sold, not the last thing held.
Interesting exception: Crypto traders are using platforms like Hyperliquid for 24/7 oil and gold exposure — treating crypto infrastructure as a trading venue, not as the trade itself.
What to Watch
- Gold above $5,500 — would confirm the market expects prolonged conflict
- Treasury yield curve — if long-term yields start rising while short-term fall, the market is pricing in stagflation (see fed-and-rates)
- Dollar strength — paradoxically, if the dollar weakens, it might signal the crisis is easing (less flight-to-safety demand)
- Bitcoin behavior — if BTC starts correlating with gold instead of equities, the safe-haven narrative may be reviving