🌅 Morning News Nuggets | Today’s top stories for gold and silver investors
April 2nd, 2026 | Brandon Sauerwein, Editor
Gold price volatility has surged to its highest level since the COVID-era panic as the Iran war enters its sixth week with no clear endgame in sight.
What Happened Yesterday
Precious metals surged Wednesday as speculation grew that the Iran conflict was nearing a genuine resolution. Oil fell below $100 a barrel and Asian shares posted their best session in nearly a year on renewed hopes the war could end soon [NBC News]. Gold and silver rode that wave of optimism higher.
Then at 9:00 PM EST, President Trump addressed the nation. By this morning, gold had erased its gains and then some, down 3.3% to around $4,600. Silver fell harder, dropping 6% to $70.66.
Gold Volatility Surges to Crisis Levels
Gold price volatility, as measured by the CBOE’s GVZ index — or the “fear gauge” for gold — just spiked above 36, its highest reading since the COVID-era panic [Investing.com GVZ Data]. The GVZ measures expected 30-day price swings in gold, derived from options market activity: the higher the reading, the more uncertainty traders are pricing in.
Market Volatility
CBOE Gold Volatility Index (GVZ)
Daily closing values • Jan 2020 – Apr 2026
The last time gold moved like this, markets were grappling with a global shutdown, runaway fiscal spending, and an emergency Fed. Today’s backdrop is different but the signal is the same: the market doesn’t know how to price what comes next.
That’s not gold failing. It’s gold reflecting a world where war outcomes are unclear, energy prices are feeding inflation, and the Fed is stuck between growth and price stability. Those conditions produce sharp, two-sided moves — not clean trends.
Stay Ahead with Gold & Silver News The most important market insights, Fed updates, and global trends — everything investors need to make smarter, safer decisions.
What Trump Said Last Night
The White House had billed the address as a major update, leading many to expect either a ceasefire announcement or an escalation. Neither came. In a roughly 20-minute speech, Trump repeated familiar claims — that the war is “nearing completion,” that Iran’s military has been devastated, and that U.S. objectives are nearly achieved — without offering a timeline, an exit strategy, or new terms for ending the conflict [Al Jazeera].
Trump did add specific threats: the U.S. would hit Iran “extremely hard” over the next two to three weeks, and if no deal is reached, he warned of strikes on Iran’s electric generating plants and oil infrastructure [CBS News].
The bigger unresolved question is what success looks like — the administration’s stated objectives have shifted from eliminating Iran’s nuclear program, to regime change, to broader regional security, without a clear finish line for any of them [NPR].
Why Metals Are Falling Today
The speech didn’t close the loop — it extended it. Without a clear path to resolution, the safe-haven bid that drove metals higher Wednesday evaporated overnight [The Washington Post]. Oil jumped nearly 4% after the address as traders priced in several more weeks of conflict, and gold and silver reversed sharply alongside it.
Iran’s response hardened the picture further. Tehran’s Foreign Ministry signaled it will continue fighting for as long as US-Israeli strikes continue — removing any near-term hope of a ceasefire [Al Jazeera].
Geopolitical premiums move fast in both directions. Yesterday’s surge and today’s reversal are the same trade unwinding.

What to Watch
The Strait of Hormuz is the pressure point that matters most right now. Iran has been stopping tankers at the strait and charging carriers up to $2 million per passage — a toll structure that, according to NBC News, Tehran appears to be treating as a long-term arrangement rather than a wartime measure [NBC News]. Any shift there moves oil prices immediately, and oil moves metals.
But oil doesn’t just move metals. It moves everything. Higher energy costs feed directly into transportation, manufacturing, and food production — the unglamorous inputs that determine what Americans pay for groceries, gas, and goods.
With inflation already a political fault line, a prolonged Hormuz disruption would pressure the Fed at exactly the wrong moment: growth slowing, prices rising, and no clean policy response available. That’s the stagflation setup, and it’s why gold price volatility is likely to remain elevated regardless of which direction the metal moves next.
Sources
NBC News — Iran war live updates
Al Jazeera — Trump’s primetime speech: key takeaways
CBS News — Trump primetime speech on Iran
NPR — Trump makes his case for war with Iran
The Washington Post — Iran war live updates
Al Jazeera — Iran war live: Trump threatens heavy strikes
Investing.com — CBOE Gold Volatility Index historical data
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.







