A Week That Began With Hope and Ends Under Pressure
Gold's week of March 9β13 tells a story of a market pulled in three directions simultaneously. The week opened at approximately $5,170 with Trump's "short war" comments on Monday sending gold surging to $5,238 on Tuesday as oil fell and rate-cut hopes revived. Then Wednesday's in-line CPI triggered a "sell the news" pullback toward $5,156. Thursday's jobless claims delivered no surprise. And now Friday opens with gold near $5,096 β back below the $5,108 support β as two new forces arrive at once: oil is above $100 again, and a 15% global tariff announcement from the US Treasury Secretary has injected a fresh dose of Dollar strength and uncertainty into markets heading into the weekend.
The LiteFinance forecast for March 13 puts the expected trading range at $5,107β$5,208, with the caveat that the Spinning Top and Hammer candlestick patterns forming near $5,153 suggest temporary consolidation with a potential reversal to the upside. The MACD has moved into negative territory near the zero line, signaling weak momentum in either direction. Gold is not in a bearish trend β it is in a confused, data-overloaded market that is waiting for a cleaner narrative, which the Fed meeting next Tuesday and Wednesday is most likely to provide.
1. Oil above $100: Iran continues to strike ships and oil infrastructure. IEA and the US released record barrels to stabilize prices but Brent has surged back above $100. Inflation fears intensify. 2. 15% Global Tariff: US Treasury Secretary announced a 15% tariff that may take effect as early as this week for up to five months β Dollar-strengthening, growth-negative, stagflation-positive for gold in the medium term.
Today's Data Events β GDP and Michigan
Friday March 13 brings two significant data releases that will shape gold's heading into the weekend and the Fed meeting week. The US GDP Second Estimate for Q4 2025 is expected to confirm growth of approximately 2.1% β in line with the advance estimate. A reading that matches or beats 2.1% would confirm US economic resilience and support the Dollar, keeping pressure on gold. A reading that disappoints β below 1.8% β would raise recession or stagnation concerns and be bullish for gold as a safe-haven and stagflation hedge. The market consensus analysis indicates that growth below 1.8% would trigger concerns of stagnation and could lead to a decline in the USD and a rise in gold prices.
The second event, and arguably the more influential one for gold, is the University of Michigan 5-year Consumer Inflation Expectations index. This is the measure the Federal Reserve watches most closely when assessing how embedded inflation has become in the public psychology. The Iran war's oil shock has not yet fully appeared in official CPI data β but it will have already begun influencing consumer inflation expectations. If today's Michigan reading shows that Americans are expecting significantly higher inflation over the next five years β say above 3.5% β it would send a strong signal to the Fed that the oil-driven inflation is becoming entrenched. This scenario is, counterintuitively, bullish for gold: high inflation expectations mean the Fed faces a stagflation trap where it cannot cut rates freely, which historically drives investors toward gold as a store of value against currency debasement.
Key Price Levels for March 13
Support Levels
Resistance Levels
The Tariff Wildcard β Stagflation Scenario Strengthens
The US Treasury Secretary's announcement of a 15% global tariff is a new variable that markets are still digesting. A blanket 15% tariff on imports, if implemented for five months as indicated, would have two simultaneous inflationary effects: it raises the prices of imported goods directly, and it potentially triggers retaliatory tariffs from trading partners that further disrupt supply chains. This tariff news on top of the Iran war oil shock creates a scenario that economists describe as a perfect stagflation setup β rising costs squeezing both consumers and businesses while growth slows due to trade disruption and energy costs. Historically, gold performs exceptionally well in stagflation environments. The 1970s stagflation period saw gold prices increase approximately tenfold. While the current situation is different in many structural ways, the fundamental dynamic is similar: gold is the asset that wins when both inflation and recession risk rise simultaneously.
Three GDP Scenarios for Gold Today
Gold Price Forecast for March 13 2026
Friday is a high-risk, low-conviction session for directional gold trading. The combination of oil above $100, a new tariff announcement, and two pending data releases creates an environment where large moves in either direction are possible. Gold at $5,096 is approaching the $5,052 support zone that has consistently attracted buyers throughout this week. A close above $5,108 today would signal that buyers are defending the Fibonacci support and position gold for a recovery ahead of next week's Fed meeting. A close below $5,052 would be technically concerning and suggest a deeper consolidation toward $5,000 before the Fed decision.
The medium-term picture remains firmly bullish. Year-to-date gold is up 19%. The 52-week gain stands at 79.37%. JPMorgan's $6,300 year-end target and Deutsche Bank's $6,000 forecast remain intact. Central bank buying from China's PBoC continues for the 15th consecutive month. The stagflation environment created by the combination of the Iran war and the new tariff announcement is structurally positive for gold on a three-to-six-month view. Today's short-term pressure is noise against a very strong signal.
Gold at $5,096 faces dual headwinds: oil above $100 and a 15% global tariff announcement. GDP and Michigan data today are the swing factors. $5,052 is the critical support to hold into the weekend.
Bias: Neutral to Cautiously Bullish β buy near $5,052 support only. Full conviction returns with Fed dovish signal on March 18. Stagflation narrative medium-term is strongly bullish for gold.
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