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Why Did Gold Prices Rise in 2026? Complete Explanation and Forecast

Why did gold prices rise in 2026? Five key reasons: Iran war, Strait of Hormuz closure, record central bank purchases, global inflation, and local currency depreciation. All karat prices in EGP, SAR, AED plus 2026 forecasts.

Gold price chart on a financial screen showing a strong upward trend with green indicators and 2026 price data

Why Did Gold Prices Rise in 2026?

Gold prices rose in 2026 due to five key factors: the Iran war that began in February, the Strait of Hormuz closure, record central bank purchases, persistent global inflation, and local currency depreciation in major gold-buying nations like Egypt. Gold reached historic all-time highs of $150.66/gram ($4,686/oz), with 21K gold in Egypt exceeding 4,420 EGP per gram.

This article explains each factor in detail, provides current gold prices in EGP, SAR, and AED for all karats, analyzes how a ceasefire would affect prices, presents forecasts for the rest of 2026, and includes a practical buying guide and comparison of gold versus other investments.

Reason 1: The Iran War and Safe-Haven Demand

Throughout history, gold has been the asset people turn to during times of fear and uncertainty. When direct military conflict between Iran and the US-led coalition erupted in February 2026, a massive wave of safe-haven demand for gold was triggered.

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How Wars Drive Gold Prices

When wars break out, several dynamics push gold higher simultaneously:

  • Fear of the unknown: Nobody knows how a war will end or how long it will last. This uncertainty drives investors from “risky” assets (stocks, real estate, currencies) to “safe” assets (gold, major government bonds)
  • Threat to economic infrastructure: Wars destroy factories, roads, and ports, reducing economic output and weakening fiat currencies. Gold cannot be destroyed or printed
  • Money printing to fund the war: Warring governments print money to finance military operations, increasing inflation and reducing the value of paper currency relative to gold
  • Supply chain disruption: Wars disrupt the flow of goods, oil, and food, raising prices and increasing demand for gold as a store of value

Iran War Impact on Gold by the Numbers

Period Gold Price ($/gram) Gold Price ($/oz) Change
January 2026 (pre-war) ~$120 ~$3,730 Baseline
February 2026 (war begins) ~$130 ~$4,040 +8.3%
March 2026 (Hormuz closure) ~$148 ~$4,600 +23.3%
April 10, 2026 (today) ~$150.66 ~$4,686 +25.6%

Gold has risen more than 25% since the start of 2026 — in less than four months. For comparison, gold’s average annual return historically is approximately 8-10%. The 2026 surge represents an exceptional acceleration driven by an acute geopolitical crisis.

Reason 2: The Strait of Hormuz Closure

When Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz on March 27, 2026, it was not just oil prices that spiked (from $85 to $126/barrel) — gold also surged sharply. The Hormuz closure threatened the entire global economy:

  • 21% of global oil transits through Hormuz — closure means an energy shortage affecting every economic sector
  • Inflation surge: Higher oil prices raise the cost of everything — transportation, food, electricity, manufacturing
  • Recession risk: Major energy crises have historically caused recessions (1973, 1979, 2008)
  • Geopolitical uncertainty amplifier: Will the war escalate? Will other waterways be closed? These questions drive gold demand higher

In the five days following the Hormuz closure (March 27 – April 2, 2026), gold rose an additional 8-10% on top of its already elevated war-driven levels.

Reason 3: Record Central Bank Gold Purchases

Central banks worldwide are buying gold at unprecedented rates. In 2025, central banks purchased more than 1,200 tonnes of gold — the third consecutive year exceeding 1,000 tonnes. This volume equals approximately one-quarter of annual global gold production.

Why Central Banks Are Buying So Much Gold

Reason Explanation Top Buyers
Reducing dollar dependence After Russia’s dollar assets were frozen in 2022, many countries realized that holding dollars carries political risk. Gold cannot be frozen or sanctioned China, India, Turkey, Poland
Inflation hedge Persistent global inflation reduces the value of reserve currencies. Gold maintains purchasing power over decades Most central banks
Reserve diversification Central banks seeking to diversify away from paper currencies Singapore, Czech Republic, Qatar
Crisis preparedness With rising geopolitical tensions, gold provides financial flexibility that paper reserves may not Middle East and Asian central banks

This massive institutional buying represents continuous demand that is not affected by daily market fluctuations — central banks buy systematically regardless of current price, creating a “floor” under gold prices that prevents sharp collapses.

Reason 4: Persistent Global Inflation

Global inflation remains above central bank targets across most major economies. As of April 2026:

Country/Region Inflation Rate (April 2026) Central Bank Target
United States ~4.2% 2%
Eurozone ~3.8% 2%
United Kingdom ~4.5% 2%
Egypt ~28-32% 7% (+/-2%)
Turkey ~40% 5%
India ~6.5% 4% (+/-2%)
Saudi Arabia ~2.5% No explicit target (riyal pegged)
UAE ~2.8% No explicit target (dirham pegged)

The Hormuz closure in March 2026 further exacerbated inflation — higher oil prices raise the cost of transporting everything, from food to clothing to construction materials. The FAO estimated that the Hormuz closure contributed to a 6-8% increase in global food prices within just two weeks.

Reason 5: Local Currency Depreciation

This factor is particularly important for readers in Egypt and other countries with weakening currencies. Even if gold’s dollar price remained flat, local currency depreciation against the dollar automatically raises the local gold price.

Practical Example with the Egyptian Pound

Assume 21K gold is $130/gram in dollar terms:

  • If USD = 50 EGP: price per gram = 130 x 50 = 6,500 EGP
  • If USD = 55 EGP: price per gram = 130 x 55 = 7,150 EGP
  • If USD = 63 EGP: price per gram = 130 x 63 = 8,190 EGP

Notice: the dollar gold price did not change ($130), but the EGP price rose from 6,500 to 8,190 — a 26% increase purely from exchange rate movement. Now add the fact that gold also rose in dollar terms (from ~$120 to ~$150/gram), and you understand why gold appears to be “flying” in Egyptian pounds. The effect is compounding: dollar price increase + pound depreciation = amplified local price increase.

This explains why an Egyptian citizen feels the gold price increase far more acutely than a Saudi or Emirati citizen — even though both are buying the same metal at the same global price.

Current Gold Prices by Karat

Egypt Gold Prices (April 10, 2026)

Karat Price/gram (EGP) Price/gram (USD) Common Use
24K (pure gold) ~5,050 EGP ~$150.66 Bullion, coins, investment
21K (most popular) ~4,420 EGP ~$131.83 Jewelry, bridal gold, daily wear
18K ~3,790 EGP ~$113.00 Gemstone jewelry, rings
14K ~2,950 EGP ~$88.00 Budget jewelry
Ounce (24K) ~157,000 EGP ~$4,686 International trading unit
Egyptian Gold Pound (8g) ~35,360 EGP ~$1,055 Popular savings vehicle

Saudi Arabia Gold Prices (April 10, 2026)

Karat Price/gram (SAR) Price/gram (USD)
24K ~565 SAR ~$150.66
22K ~518 SAR ~$138.10
21K ~494 SAR ~$131.83
18K ~424 SAR ~$113.00

UAE Gold Prices (April 10, 2026)

Karat Price/gram (AED) Price/gram (USD)
24K ~553 AED ~$150.66
22K ~507 AED ~$138.10
21K ~484 AED ~$131.83
18K ~415 AED ~$113.00

Ceasefire Impact on Gold Prices

Possible Scenarios

Scenario Probability Gold Impact Expected Price ($/gram)
Continued tensions (status quo) 50% Stays elevated with volatility $145-160
New military escalation 20% Sharp additional increase $170-185
Partial ceasefire 20% Moderate decline $135-145
Comprehensive peace 10% Notable but limited decline $125-140

Critical point: Even in a comprehensive peace scenario, gold would not return to pre-war levels (~$120/gram). Other factors — central bank buying, inflation, currency weakness — support elevated prices independently of the war. The war added a “fear premium” estimated at $15-25/gram, and only this premium would disappear with peace.

Forecast for the Rest of 2026

Major Institution Forecasts

Institution Year-End 2026 Forecast ($/oz) Equivalent ($/gram) Basis
Goldman Sachs $5,000-5,200 $161-167 Continued central bank buying
JP Morgan $4,800-5,100 $154-164 Geopolitical risk + inflation
UBS $4,700-5,000 $151-161 Dollar weakness + Asian demand
Bank of America $5,200-5,500 $167-177 Escalation scenario possible
World Gold Council $4,600-5,300 $148-170 Wide range scenario-dependent

Gold vs. Other Investments in 2026

Asset Performance Since Jan 2026 Risk Level Liquidity Best For
Gold +25-30% (in USD) Medium High Crisis and inflation hedge
US Dollar (in Egypt) +8-12% vs EGP Low High Daily stability seekers
Egypt Stock Market (EGX 30) +15-20% in EGP High Medium Equity-savvy investors
Egypt Real Estate +15-25% in EGP Low-Medium Low Large capital, long horizon
Egypt Bank Certificates +10-13% (annual interest) Low Low (locked) Fixed income seekers
Tadawul (Saudi stocks) +5-10% Medium High Diversified Saudi investors
Dubai Real Estate +8-12% Medium Medium Long-term Gulf investors
Bitcoin -5% to +15% (very volatile) Very High High Speculators comfortable with large losses

Practical Buying Guide

For Egyptian Investors

  1. Buy bullion and gold pounds, not jewelry: Craftsmanship fees (30-150 EGP/gram) on jewelry are largely lost when selling. Bullion has lower fees (15-30 EGP/gram) and better resale value
  2. Buy from certified shops: Ensure the hallmark stamp from the Egyptian Assay Office is present on every piece
  3. Do not put all savings in gold: General rule: 20-30% of savings in gold as a hedge, with the rest diversified across dollars, real estate, and other instruments
  4. Regular buying beats timing: Instead of trying to “buy the dip,” invest fixed amounts monthly regardless of price. This gives you a good average price over time
  5. Keep purchase receipts: Receipts prove ownership and facilitate fair resale later

For Gulf Investors

  1. Dubai offers the best physical gold prices in the region: Lowest premiums above international spot (0-1%) and wide selection of bars and coins
  2. Gold ETFs: For investors who do not want physical storage, funds like GLD or IAU are available through international brokers
  3. Bank gold accounts: Some Saudi and UAE banks offer gold savings accounts with electronic buy/sell at near-spot prices
  4. Currency is not a factor: Since SAR and AED are pegged to USD, local gold prices move in lockstep with dollar gold prices — no additional currency risk

Historical Gold Price Context: Why 2026 Is Unprecedented

To understand why gold 2026 surge is exceptional it helps to compare with previous major gold rallies in history:

Period Trigger Gold Price Range Peak Increase Duration
1971-1980 End of gold standard oil crises inflation $35 to $850/oz +2329% 9 years
2001-2011 9/11 Iraq War financial crisis QE $256 to $1921/oz +650% 10 years
2019-2020 COVID pandemic massive stimulus $1280 to $2075/oz +62% 18 months
2023-2024 Central bank buying inflation fears $1830 to $2790/oz +52% 18 months
Jan-Apr 2026 Iran war Hormuz closure central banks $3730 to $4686/oz +25.6% 4 months ongoing

What makes 2026 unique is not just the absolute price level at all-time highs but the speed of the increase. A 25 percent gain in under four months from already-elevated levels indicates genuine panic buying not the gradual accumulation that characterized the 2001-2011 bull market. The Iran war and Hormuz closure created the kind of acute system-threatening crisis that triggers the most intense gold buying activity.

The Gold Supply Side: Mining and Recycling

While demand factors dominate the 2026 gold story supply dynamics also play a role. Global gold mine production is approximately 3500-3600 tonnes per year and has been relatively flat for the past decade because declining ore grades mean the easy-to-mine high-grade deposits have largely been exhausted. New mines take 10-20 years from discovery to production meaning even with record prices new supply cannot respond quickly. Environmental Social and Governance requirements have made it harder and more expensive to open new mines.

Approximately 1100-1200 tonnes of gold are recycled each year primarily from old jewelry. High prices in 2026 are increasing recycling volumes as people sell gold jewelry for cash but this additional supply is not enough to offset the surge in demand.

Supply-Demand Balance

Category Annual Volume tonnes Trend in 2026
Mine production ~3550 Flat cannot increase quickly
Recycled gold ~1200 Increasing high prices incentivize selling
Total Supply ~4750
Jewelry demand ~2200 Decreasing high prices reduce buying
Technology industrial ~300 Stable
Central bank purchases ~1200 Increasing strongly
Investment demand bars coins ETFs ~1300 Increasing strongly
Total Demand ~5000
Deficit ~250 Widening in 2026

The gold market is in a structural deficit with demand exceeding supply by approximately 250 tonnes per year. This deficit is being met by drawdowns from existing above-ground stocks. As long as this deficit persists gold prices have fundamental support independent of geopolitical events.

Gold Role in Islamic Finance

For readers in the Middle East gold holds a special place in Islamic finance principles. Physical gold including bars coins and jewelry is considered halal as an investment asset provided transactions are conducted spot meaning immediate exchange not deferred. Gold futures and some gold ETFs may raise Sharia compliance questions depending on the specific structure.

Gold held for investment is subject to zakat at 2.5 percent of the value annually if it exceeds the nisab threshold of approximately 85 grams of gold. At current prices the nisab is approximately 12806 dollars or roughly 810000 Egyptian pounds. In many Muslim cultures gold jewelry serves as mahr in marriage contracts and rising gold prices have increased the financial burden of mahr. Several Islamic banks in the Gulf and Egypt offer Sharia-compliant gold savings accounts where customers can buy hold and sell gold without taking physical delivery structured to comply with spot transaction requirements.

Common Gold Investment Mistakes to Avoid

  1. Buying at the peak in panic: The worst time to buy gold is when everyone is panicking and prices are spiking. If you did not own gold before the Iran war do not rush to buy at 150 dollars per gram. Wait for a pullback or invest gradually over time
  2. Ignoring the spread: The difference between buying and selling prices for physical gold can be 2-5 percent in Egypt and 0.5-1 percent in Dubai. This means you start with a loss that must be recovered before you can profit
  3. Storing gold insecurely: Home storage of significant gold quantities creates theft risk. Bank safe deposit boxes while not free are far safer. Some investors bury gold which creates risk of loss and is not recommended
  4. Over-allocating to gold: Gold should be 15-30 percent of an investment portfolio not 80-100 percent. Over-concentration in any single asset even gold carries significant risk
  5. Buying high-premium jewelry as investment: Designer jewelry and antique gold pieces carry premiums of 50-200 percent above gold value. These are fine as jewelry but poor as pure gold investments because you will not recover the premium when selling
  6. Not accounting for opportunity cost: Gold does not pay dividends or interest. While it is rising strongly in 2026 in normal years holding gold means missing out on stock market returns. Consider gold as insurance not as your primary growth investment
  7. Trading gold actively: Trying to time gold daily ups and downs is extremely difficult even for professionals. Transaction costs eat into profits quickly. Buy-and-hold for the medium to long term is the optimal strategy for most gold investors

How Different Country Citizens Should Think About Gold

For Egyptian Citizens

Gold serves a dual purpose for Egyptians as both a global investment asset and a critical hedge against EGP depreciation. The historical pattern shows that gold in EGP terms has consistently outperformed bank deposits and often outperformed real estate over multi-year periods. However Egyptians should be aware that gold EGP price can decline temporarily if the pound strengthens during IMF disbursements or positive economic news. The recommended approach is to allocate 20-30 percent of savings to gold primarily bullion and gold pounds and 20-30 percent to hard currency with the remainder in diversified assets. Buy gold regularly in small amounts rather than making large one-time purchases.

For Saudi and Emirati Citizens

Gulf citizens face less currency risk but still benefit from gold as a portfolio diversifier and geopolitical hedge. With the Iran conflict on their doorstep gold provides insurance against scenarios where regional instability might affect even the strongest Gulf economies. The recommended approach is to allocate 10-20 percent of portfolio to gold primarily through ETFs or Dubai physical gold which offers the lowest premiums. Use gold as a complement to stock market and real estate investments not as a primary holding.

For International Investors Considering Middle East Gold Exposure

International investors can gain gold exposure without buying physical gold in the Middle East. Global gold ETFs like GLD IAU and PHAU provide the same gold price exposure with better liquidity. The main reason to buy physical gold in the Middle East specifically is if you are a resident taking advantage of Dubai zero-tax low-premium environment or if you are an Egyptian seeking physical possession as an EGP hedge.

Conclusion

Gold’s rise in 2026 is not a surprise for those following the markets — it is the logical result of a perfect storm of concurrent factors: the Iran war flooding markets with fear, the Hormuz closure threatening global energy supplies, central bank purchasing creating massive and continuous institutional demand, inflation eroding the value of paper money, and local currency depreciation amplifying the increase for citizens across the Arab world.

Gold at $150.66/gram ($4,686/oz) is at historic all-time highs never reached before. But the real question is not “Is gold too expensive?” — it is “Will the reasons pushing it higher end?” And as long as the war continues, central banks keep buying, and inflation remains elevated, the answer is no.

The final advice: do not buy gold driven by fear or greed. Buy it as part of a balanced investment plan that protects your wealth from the crises our world is experiencing. And diversify — because even gold does not rise forever.

Prices as of April 10, 2026: Gold 24K at $150.66/gram (5,050 EGP). 21K at $131.83/gram (4,420 EGP). Brent crude at $108-112/barrel. USD/EGP at approximately 63.3.

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