Market Snapshot (GBP)
- Current Gold Price: £4,034 per ounce
- Price Last Monday (10AM GMT): £3,808 per ounce
- Weekly High: £4,072 per ounce
- Weekly Change: +£226 (+5.94%)
A powerful week for gold. The £4,000 level has now been decisively reclaimed — and held — reinforcing confidence at these elevated levels.
🔑 Key Drivers This Week

1️⃣ Middle East Escalation – Safe Haven Demand Surges
Escalating conflict between the United States and Iran has significantly raised geopolitical risk.
Following U.S. military action against Iranian targets, Iran retaliated with strikes against U.S. embassies and military bases across multiple regions. Markets reacted immediately:
- Oil volatility increased
- Equity markets softened
- Capital rotated into defensive assets
Historically, investors would pivot heavily into U.S. Treasuries during such instability.
However, with U.S. sovereign debt at extreme levels and long-term fiscal sustainability increasingly questioned, Treasuries no longer provide the same unquestioned security.
Gold, by contrast, carries:
- No counterparty risk
- No default risk
- No political liability
In times of military escalation, gold becomes not just a hedge — but a neutral reserve asset.
2️⃣ Central Bank Buying – Strategic, Not Speculative
The structural driver remains central bank accumulation.
After the freezing of Russian foreign reserves following the Ukraine invasion, sovereign nations recognised a critical risk: reserve assets held within the Western financial system can be restricted.
This marked a turning point.
Central banks globally have since accelerated gold purchases as:
- A hedge against sanctions
- Protection against reserve seizure
- Insurance against trade and tariff fragmentation
Gold held domestically cannot be frozen.
It cannot be digitally restricted.
It cannot be politically weaponised.
This is not short-term positioning.
This is long-term reserve strategy.
3️⃣ Investor Reallocation – Debt & Political Risk
Alongside sovereign buying, private and institutional investors are reallocating due to:
- Elevated U.S. debt levels
- Political division and policy unpredictability
- Ongoing tariff tensions
- Trade fragmentation
Traditionally, Treasuries were the safe harbour.
Now, with real yields compressed and fiscal pressure rising, gold is increasingly viewed as the more viable store of value.
Physical Market Conditions

Despite the price move above £4,000:
- Premium gold coins remain tight in supply
- Graded, limited mintage coins are in particularly high demand
- Dealer replenishment remains slower than usual
Investors are not just buying exposure.
They are buying verified, tangible assets.
Tamper-proof graded coins continue to attract demand due to:
- Provenance verification
- Certified purity and weight
- Independent grading
- Serialised registration
- Population reports (how many graded the same or higher)
In uncertain times, verification matters.
RAX2 Strategic View
The move above £4,000 is not purely speculative momentum.
It reflects:
- Military escalation risk
- Structural central bank buying
- Sovereign debt concerns
- Growing distrust in fiat-based reserves
Short-term volatility may occur.
But structurally, gold continues to reprice higher in response to a world becoming more fragmented, more indebted, and more politically unstable.
Final Thought
At Rax2 Assets, this isn’t about short-term headlines.
It’s about control.
In a world of rising debt, geopolitical escalation, asset freezes and political interference, our clients are choosing to protect their wealth in a tax-efficient, fully controlled manner through physical gold ownership.
No counterparty exposure.
No reliance on government policy.
No dependence on financial institutions.
Just tangible, globally recognised wealth — held directly.
For many investors, physical gold offers:
Capital preservation
Portfolio independence
Reduced exposure to external political and financial instability
The ability to structure holdings in a tax-efficient way
When uncertainty rises, control becomes premium.
And that is exactly what physical gold provides.
