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Gold opens higher as U.S.-Israel strikes on Iran raise regional temperature

Gold prices rose ​more than 1% on Monday after ‌the U.S. and Israel launched major strikes on Iran, killing Supreme Leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei, escalating geopolitical tensions and deepening global economic ⁠uncertainty.

Spot ​gold was up 1.35% at $5,348.49 an ounce by 2316 GMT.

U.S. gold futures rose 2.2% to $5,362.30.

Israel launched a new wave of strikes on Tehran on Sunday and Iran responded with ​more missile barrages, a day after ‌the killing of Khamenei pitched the Middle East and the global economy into deepening uncertainty.

Bullion, a traditional safe-haven asset, has hit successive record highs already this year due to heightened global political and economic ‌uncertainty.

“Gold is ​perhaps the finest ‌barometer to reflect global uncertainty and, to mix metaphors, the ​mercury is rising. We should expect gold ⁠to be repriced higher to fresh records as ⁠we enter a whole new era of geopolitical uncertainty,” said independent analyst Ross ​Norman.

The latest rally builds on a 64% surge in 2025, driven by strong central bank buying, robust inflows into exchange-traded funds and expectations of U.S. monetary policy easing.

Last week, J.P. Morgan and Bank of America ⁠reiterated that gold prices could climb toward the key $6,000 level. J.P. Morgan noted that it forecasts enough demand from central banks and investors this year to ultimately push prices to $6,300 an ounce by the end of 2026.

Data on Friday showed ⁠that U.S. producer prices rose more than ​expected in January, suggesting inflation could pick up in coming ⁠months.

Investors will also watch a series of labor market readings this week, including the ‌ADP employment report, weekly jobless claims and the non-farm payrolls report.

Spot silver ​rose 1.21% to $94.95 an ounce after registering a monthly gain in February.

Spot platinum climbed 0.31% to $2,372 an ounce while palladium was down 0.35% at $1,779.80 an ounce.

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