A realistic composite image showing stacked gold bars and a rising golden arrow beside a metallic dollar symbol and bundles of hundred-dollar bills, set against a backdrop of explosions, military helicopters, candlestick charts, the New York skyline, and the Statue of Liberty.

Why Gold and the Dollar Sometimes Rise Together: Understanding the Exception to Their Historical Relationship

The traditional relationship between gold and the dollar is well-established in economic literature: when the dollar strengthens, gold weakens, and vice versa. However, during major crises—wars, financial collapses, or liquidity shocks—we occasionally witness both assets rising simultaneously.

Has the rule changed? Or is there a deeper explanation?


The “Normal” Relationship Between Gold and the Dollar

Gold is priced globally in US dollars. This fundamental pricing mechanism creates a natural inverse correlation:

  • When the dollar rises: Gold becomes more expensive in other currencies, reducing global demand
  • When the dollar falls: Gold becomes relatively cheaper worldwide, increasing demand

This pattern was clearly visible during the Federal Reserve’s rate-hiking cycles in 2018 and 2022, when monetary tightening supported dollar strength while pressuring gold prices across multiple periods.

Understanding these gold essentials helps investors recognize when market behavior aligns with—or deviates from—historical norms.


Why Do They Rise Together During Crises?

In times of severe tension—such as wars or financial crises—a phenomenon emerges known as dual safe-haven demand.

The Dollar as Immediate Liquidity

The dollar serves as the world’s primary reserve currency, and the US Treasury market remains the deepest and most liquid globally. When fear strikes, capital first seeks liquidity above all else.

During the March 2020 crisis, the Dollar Index initially surged as investors desperately sought cash positions, even though gold later resumed its upward trajectory.

Gold as Long-Term Value Storage

Gold carries no credit risk and has no connection to corporate earnings. Historically, it serves as a hedge against inflation and loss of confidence in the financial system.

Following the assassination of Qasem Soleimani on January 3, 2020, gold rose approximately 2–3% within days, while the dollar maintained its strength—according to Reuters coverage at the time.


When Does Simultaneous Rise Occur?

This behavior typically emerges when three conditions converge:

ConditionDescription
Genuine Geopolitical ShockWar, energy supply threats, or military escalation
Liquidity Exit from Risk AssetsCapital fleeing equities and emerging market currencies
Economic UncertaintyLack of clarity driving demand for both monetary and physical hedging

Under these circumstances:

  • The dollar rises due to immediate liquidity needs
  • Gold rises due to long-term risk hedging requirements

Why This Isn’t a Contradiction

The inverse relationship between gold and the dollar operates under normal monetary conditions. During crises, however, psychological and financial factors override traditional pricing relationships.

Market ConditionPrimary Driver
Normal TimesInterest rates and dollar strength guide gold
Crisis PeriodsFear drives both assets upward simultaneously

For those interested in deeper market dynamics, our gold price coverage provides ongoing context for these movements.


Current Market Observations

Amid escalating tensions in the Middle East:

  • Gold trades near elevated levels due to increased risk premiums
  • The dollar maintains strength, supported by Treasury inflows

This pattern doesn’t signal the end of the inverse relationship. Rather, markets are experiencing an exceptional phase where safety concerns override traditional pricing mechanisms.


Summary

Key PointExplanation
Normal ConditionsInverse relationship between gold and dollar holds true
Major CrisesBoth may rise due to dual safe-haven demand
Dollar’s RoleRepresents immediate liquidity and cash security
Gold’s RoleRepresents long-term value preservation
Current PhaseExceptional period where safety trumps traditional correlations

The relationship between gold and the dollar isn’t broken during these exceptional periods—it’s simply operating under different rules. Understanding this distinction separates informed observers from those confused by apparent market contradictions.

For questions about our research methodology, feel free to contact us or review our privacy policy for information on how we handle data.

At Dhbna, we understand relationships within their proper context—we don’t merely observe price movements; we explain why they changed. Learn more about us and our commitment to independent gold market research.

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