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Chaos Hedge Gold and Oil Surge as Israeli Strikes on Iran Ignite Broader Conflict Fears

Israeli airstrikes on Iranian nuclear and military sites on June 13, 2025, have fueled fears of a wider Middle East conflict, propelling gold and oil prices to new peaks. Gold nears record highs, while oil surged up to 13%, reflecting supply risks in a region producing a third of global crude. J.P. Morgan warns oil could hit $120 per barrel, and gold’s role as a chaos hedge strengthens amid rising U.S. debt and trade tensions. Here’s what’s driving these surges and their global implications.

Gold Climbs as Safe-Haven Demand Soars

Gold rose 1.27% to $3,428.81 per troy ounce on June 13, 2025, at 19:49 GMT+3, up 47.51% year-over-year, driven by U.S.-Iran tensions following Israel’s strikes on Iran’s Natanz nuclear site and the death of Revolutionary Guards commander Hossein Salami. U.S. debt, projected to exceed 150% of GDP by 2055 per CBO estimates, and the U.S. Dollar Index at 98.00 on June 12 bolster gold’s appeal as an inflation and risk hedge. Technicals suggest a push past $3,446.79, with support at $3,260 if prices dip below $3,379.79.

Oil Spikes on Supply Disruption Risks

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude climbed 6.13% to $72.21 per barrel at 19:40 GMT+3, and Brent crude rose 5.98% to $73.51 at 19:41 GMT+3, peaking at a 13% surge, per June 13, 2025, data. The Middle East’s role in a third of global oil supply amplifies fears of Iranian export disruptions. J.P. Morgan’s 7% worst-case scenario predicts oil at $120, potentially pushing U.S. inflation to 5%. A Strait of Hormuz closure is unlikely, as it would harm Iran’s oil exports to China, but deglobalization and tariffs fuel sticky inflation. WTI faces resistance at $74.35, with OPEC’s production hikes adding supply pressure.

Geopolitical and Economic Drivers

Israel’s unilateral strikes, disavowed by U.S. Secretary of State Marco Rubio, follow stalled U.S.-Iran nuclear talks and an International Atomic Energy Agency sanctions vote. U.S.-China trade talks, easing tech export controls on June 9, support demand, but Iran tensions overshadow. U.S. data—May’s nonfarm payrolls at 139,000 vs. 126,000 expected, ADP at 37,000 vs. 115,000—backs oil demand, yet tariffs and fragmenting supply chains risk volatility. The Nifty 50’s 0.69% drop to 24,718.60 and gold’s outperformance in a 60/20/20 portfolio since 2022 reflect market nerves.

Steering the Geopolitical Landscape

Gold and oil’s surges signal U.S.-Iran conflict risks and economic fragility. Gold could break $3,500 amid debt and geopolitical chaos, while oil risks a $120 spike, per J.P. Morgan. U.S.-China trade progress and Federal Reserve rate cut odds (58.5% for September) offer stability, but upcoming U.S. Consumer Price Index data, expected at 2.5% year-over-year, could shift sentiment. Investors tend to hedge with gold and energy ETFs, tracking Middle East escalations and inflation cues. These commodity spikes aren’t mere market noise—they’re a clarion call for navigating uncertainty with further strategic upkeep.

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