Gold price is nearing its all-time high at $3,433, further fueling its up-and-to-the-right rally in 2025, as escalating tensions in the Middle East drive investors toward traditional safe-haven assets.
The primary catalyst for gold’s recent gains is the escalation of tensions in the Middle East following Israel’s military strike on Iran’s nuclear sites. Markets have grown increasingly nervous about the potential for broader regional conflict and prompting a flight to safety, as investors pile into gold.
Higher oil prices are expected to drive up costs for gasoline and diesel, adding to inflationary pressures that are already a concern for central banks and consumers alike and enhancing gold’s appeal as a hedge against inflation and economic instability.
Gold’s rise to become the world’s second-largest reserve asset in 2024, surpassing the euro, is a sizable development in global finance. According to the latest data from the ECB report, the U.S. dollar remains dominant with a 46% share of global reserves, followed by gold at 20% and the euro at 16%.
The shift reflects a long-term trend of central banks diversifying their reserves away from traditional currencies in response to geopolitical risks and concerns over the weaponization of the dollar.
Central banks have been net buyers of gold for three consecutive years, with annual purchases exceeding 1,000 tonnes, double the pace of the previous decade. Demand is expected to continue, stoking the bullish case for gold and prompting everyone’s favorite gold bug, Peter Schiff, to comment:
“Gold is close to a new record high, but the $GDX is already trading at its highest level since Sept. 2012. The fact that gold mining stocks are now leading the metal is a sign that this gold bull market has kicked into a higher gear, as is the recent breakout in silver. Got gold?”