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CSFX Commodity Intelligence — Week of March 30, 2026

March 28, 2026
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CSFX Commodity Intelligence — Week of March 30, 2026
Capital Street FX — Commodity Intelligence Report  ·  Vol. 1 · Issue 88  ·  Research Division Published: Saturday, 28 March 2026, 14:00 UTC+5:30  |  Coverage: 30 Mar – 03 Apr 2026  |  capitalstreetfx.com
CSFX Weekly Commodity Market Intelligence
Hormuz, the Fed, and the Jobs Report:
The Most Volatile Week of 2026
Gold  ·  Silver  ·  WTI Crude Oil  ·  Natural Gas — Fibonacci, Candlestick & Trade Setups for the Week Ahead
WEEKLY EDITION · ISSUE 88
28 March 2026
Coverage: 30 Mar – 03 Apr 2026
Analyst: CSFX Research Division
Gold XAU/USD
$4,493.12
▲ +$111.21 (+2.54%)
Silver XAG/USD
$69.74
▲ +$1.65 (+2.43%)
WTI Crude
$101.17
▲ +$7.37 (+7.86%)
Brent Crude
$112.57
▲ +4.22%
Natural Gas
$3.025
▲ +$0.026 (+0.87%)
DXY Index
101.42
▼ Hawkish Hold
US CPI (Mar 11)
2.4%
YoY Reading
US Unemployment
4.4%
Feb Data

This isn’t an ordinary trading week. Commodity markets enter the week of March 30 carrying the weight of three simultaneous, independent catalysts — each powerful enough to move prices by 5–15% on its own. Fed Chair Powell speaks on Monday, setting the rate narrative that anchors all USD-denominated commodity prices. The EIA crude inventory report drops Wednesday, providing the weekly supply signal against a backdrop of Strait of Hormuz closure that has already embedded a $14–18/bbl war premium in Brent. And on Friday, March Non-Farm Payrolls delivers the labour market verdict that will either validate or shatter the “hawkish hold” pricing that has been the dominant force suppressing gold and silver since the January highs. Layered beneath all of this: a hard US deadline of April 6 for Iran to reopen the Hormuz Strait, making every headline between now and the weekend a potential crude oil price spike. Gold is caught between a hawkish Fed and a genuine war premium floor. Silver is down 44% from its February all-time high and approaching textbook oversold territory. WTI crude has broken above $100 for the first time since July 2022. Natural Gas is quietly building a base that the EIA’s own forecasts suggest is undervalued by 26%. Know your setups before Monday’s Asian session opens.

Section 01

Friday’s Close: Where Four Commodities Stand Going Into the Most Important Week of Q1

Gold (XAU/USD) · CFD
$4,493.12
▲ +$111.21 · +2.54% on day
ATH $5,627 Jan 2026 · Correcting −21% from peak · 0.618 Fib zone
Silver (XAG/USD) · CFD
$69.74
▲ +$1.65 · +2.43% on day
ATH $122.74 Feb 2026 · Correcting −44% · RSI ~39 approaching oversold
WTI Crude Oil · CFD
$101.17
▲ +$7.37 · +7.86% on day
Hormuz war premium $14–18/bbl · 0.236 Fib zone · Highest since Jul 2022
Natural Gas (NG1) · NYMEX
$3.025
▲ +$0.026 · +0.87% on day
Post-spike correction from $7.50 · Range-bound 2.76–3.88 zone · 26% below EIA forecast
⚡ Week-Ahead Context The commodity complex enters the week with an unusual configuration: oil is spiking on geopolitical supply disruption while precious metals are falling on monetary policy headwinds — the exact opposite of the typical correlation. The divergence creates distinct trade opportunities in each commodity with independent catalyst profiles. Do not treat this as a “commodity rally” or “commodity selloff” week — each instrument has its own story.
Section 02

Three Forces That Will Define Every Commodity Trade This Week

🛢 The Hormuz Strait War Premium

The Strait of Hormuz has been effectively closed to commercial shipping since March 2, disrupting approximately 17.8 million barrels per day of global oil flow. Iran has deployed a yuan-based toll system for allied vessels, and the Trump administration has set an April 6 deadline for Iran to reopen the waterway. Goldman Sachs estimates a $14–18/bbl war premium is currently embedded in Brent. IEA Member countries released 400 million barrels of emergency reserves on March 11 — providing only a temporary bridge. The binary outcome of the April 6 deadline (ceasefire vs. escalation) represents the single largest known tail risk in commodity markets this week.

🏦 Federal Reserve — Hawkish Hold: The Headwind for Gold & Silver

The Fed held rates at 3.50%–3.75% at the March 17–18 FOMC meeting — its second consecutive hold. The CME FedWatch tool now prices zero rate cuts for 2026, and the probability of a rate hike by year-end has risen to 35%. Goldman Sachs pushed its first cut call from June to September 2026. Real Treasury yields have risen sharply, increasing the opportunity cost of holding gold and silver — the fundamental reason both metals have corrected so severely from their January–February highs despite an active geopolitical crisis.

📊 US Labour Market — The NFP Wildcard

February 2026 NFP shed 92,000 jobs — the steepest decline in four months. Health care, federal government, manufacturing, and transportation all contracted. December was revised to −17K (from +48K). March NFP on Friday (April 3) is now the week’s single highest-impact event for commodity traders: a weak print (near-recession signal) is bullish for gold, bearish for oil and silver; a strong print reinforces the hawkish Fed narrative and is bearish for precious metals. Plan both scenarios before Friday opens.

🌏 China PMI: The Demand Signal for Oil & Base Metals

China accounts for roughly 50% of global copper demand and approximately 15% of crude oil. Monday’s Caixin Manufacturing PMI (forecast: 50.8 vs. prior 50.6) is the preferred private-sector gauge — a reading above 51.0 typically lifts oil and base metals. The Monday morning PMI sweep (US, UK, Europe, Japan, China) will be the opening macro catalyst for the week and directly feeds into crude oil demand expectations entering Tuesday’s trading.

📉 Gold’s Paradox: The Safe-Haven That’s Selling Off

Gold has delivered its worst monthly performance since March 2020, falling ~21% from the January ATH of $5,627 to current levels near $4,490. Three forces are simultaneously bearish (Fed’s hawkish pivot, stronger USD, energy-driven inflation expectations) against one bullish force (genuine geopolitical tail risk). The RSI on the daily chart has fallen toward 36–40, approaching oversold territory for the first time since the correction began — suggesting the worst of the sell-off may be exhausting, but a confirmed reversal requires Powell to soften or NFP to disappoint.

⚡ Natural Gas: The Trans-Atlantic Divergence Trade

US natural gas at $3.025/MMBtu trades 20% below the EIA’s 2026 forecast of $3.80/MMBtu, driven by milder-than-expected February temperatures leaving storage above seasonal norms. European TTF futures have surged 34% since March 1 on LNG supply route concerns. Henry Hub is structurally insulated from Hormuz disruption — creating a widening trans-Atlantic gas price divergence that experienced traders can monetize through relative value strategies: long Henry Hub futures, short European TTF.

Section 03

The Week’s Arsenal: Eight Market-Moving Events in Five Trading Days

📅 Critical Sequence For commodity traders, the week’s setup is straightforward: Powell on Monday sets the monetary policy narrative for gold and silver; the PMI sweep on Monday sets the demand narrative for oil; the EIA inventory report on Wednesday provides the supply signal for crude; and NFP on Friday is the apex event that reprices everything simultaneously. Plan the sequence, not just the individual events.
DateCountryEventTime (UTC)ForecastPreviousImpactCommodity Relevance
Mon 30 Mar🇺🇸 USAFed Chair Powell Speech13:30HIGHGold, Silver — rate expectations pivot risk
Mon 30 Mar🇨🇳 ChinaCaixin Manufacturing PMI01:4550.850.6HIGHCrude Oil, Copper, Natural Gas
Mon 30 Mar🇺🇸 USAISM Manufacturing PMI (prelim)14:0048.548.2HIGHCrude Oil, Copper demand
Mon 30 Mar🇪🇺 EuropeEurozone Manufacturing PMI09:0047.547.3MEDEUR, commodity demand signal
Tue 31 Mar🇺🇸 USAJOLTS Job Openings (Feb)14:007.6M7.4MHIGHGold (USD correlation), rate expectations
Tue 31 Mar🇯🇵 JapanBoJ Tankan Survey (Q1)23:50*1214HIGHJPY, Asian oil demand signal
Wed 01 Apr🇦🇺 AustraliaRBA Rate Decision03:30Hold 4.10%4.10%HIGHAUD/USD cross, gold demand
Wed 01 Apr🇺🇸 USAADP Private Payrolls (Mar)12:15+105K−92KHIGHGold, USD (NFP preview catalyst)
Wed 01 Apr🇺🇸 USAEIA Weekly Crude Inventories14:30−1.2M bbl+3.4M bblHIGHWTI Crude Oil — primary weekly catalyst
Wed 01 Apr🇺🇸 USAISM Manufacturing PMI (final)14:0048.548.2HIGHCrude Oil demand outlook
Thu 02 Apr🇺🇸 USAInitial Jobless Claims12:30218K224KHIGHGold (USD correlation)
Thu 02 Apr🌍 GeopoliticalIran/Hormuz April 6 Deadline — Pre-PositioningOngoingGEOPOLIT.WTI Crude — binary spike risk ±$10–15/bbl
Fri 03 Apr🇺🇸 USANFP — March Employment (BLS)12:30+85K−92K⚡ APEXAll commodities — the anchor event of the week
Fri 03 Apr🇺🇸 USAUnemployment Rate (Mar)12:304.4%4.4%HIGHUSD, Gold, rate pricing

* Japan release times shown in preceding-night UTC. All times approximate. Sources: BLS, EIA, RBA, Reuters, Investing.com as of 28 March 2026.

Section 04

XAU/USDGold at $4,493: The Safe-Haven Paying the Price of a Hawkish Fed

Current Price
$4,493
28 Mar 2026 close
ATH (Jan 2026)
$5,627
Fib 1.0 swing high
Correction
−21%
From ATH — worst since Mar 2020
Fib 0.618 Support
$4,490
Current zone — key hold
Next Support
$4,238
Fib 0.5 — if 0.618 breaks
Resistance 1
$4,738
Fib 0.764 — first overhead

Why Gold Is Falling During a War: The 2026 Macro Paradox

This is 2026’s defining macro paradox: gold should be surging during a Middle East war, yet it has corrected 21% from its January all-time high. The answer lies in the sequence of cause and effect. The Hormuz disruption triggered an oil price spike, which triggered energy-driven inflation, which forced the Fed into a hawkish hold with zero rate cuts now priced for the year. Higher real Treasury yields increase the opportunity cost of holding gold (which pays no yield), while a stronger dollar mechanically suppresses dollar-denominated gold prices. Three bearish forces are overwhelming one bullish force — and the resolution will come only when the Fed pivots or the conflict intensifies to a degree that makes even the dollar’s safe-haven status questionable.

📈 Trend Structure

The intermediate trend is bearish. Gold has violated its 50-day and 200-day moving averages. The descending channel from the January ATH has produced four lower highs. The Fib 0.618 at $4,490 is the current defence — held on three consecutive daily closes this week. A break below opens the path to $4,238 (Fib 0.5) and then $3,986 (Fib 0.382).

🕯️ Candlestick Signals

The January ATH was met with a textbook Doji / Shooting Star at $5,627, confirming institutional distribution. The March 26 session printed a significant long lower wick off the intraday low near $4,350, suggesting aggressive short-covering is underway at the Fib 0.618 zone. Today’s +2.54% session confirms the bounce is real, but a confirmed reversal requires a close above $4,738 (Fib 0.764).

🔬 Oscillators

RSI (14): ~36–40 — approaching oversold for the first time since the correction began. No bullish divergence confirmed yet. Stochastics also below 40. These readings are consistent with a tradeable oversold bounce rather than a trend reversal — patience for confirmation is rewarded over early entries.

🏦 Institutional Forecasts

Goldman Sachs: $4,900/oz by Dec 2026. JPMorgan: $4,753 average, $5,000/oz by Q4. UBS: $5,000 average. Bank of America: $4,538 average, $5,000 high. With gold at $4,493, these consensus forecasts imply meaningful upside — but only once the Fed hawkish hold narrative softens.

⚖️
WATCH — Wait for Powell Monday Before Committing Size
The highest-probability gold setup this week is to wait for the post-Powell reaction on Monday before entering. A dovish surprise creates a range-trade long targeting $4,738; a hawkish reiteration opens the path to $4,114 (Fib 0.382). The NFP on Friday is the week’s most powerful gold catalyst: a miss of more than 50K below consensus could trigger a 5–8% bounce as recession fears override the hawkish Fed narrative.
RSI: ~36–40 oversold approachTrend: BearishKey trigger: Powell Mon / NFP FriFib 0.618: $4,490
📌 GOLD TRADE SETUP — WEEK OF 30 MAR – 03 APR 2026
Bull Entry Zone
$4,400 – $4,490
Fib 0.618 zone defence
Stop Loss (Bull)
$4,350
Below Fib 0.618 confirmed
Bull Target 1
$4,738
Fib 0.764 — range top
Bull Target 2
$4,900
GS year-end target zone
Bear Entry (Break)
Close below $4,400
Daily close confirmation needed
Bear Target
$4,238 → $3,986
Fib 0.5 → Fib 0.382
R:R (Bull)
1 : 2.4 to T1
Clean setup if holds 0.618
Position Size
Reduced — Wait for Powell
Monday gap risk is high
Section 05

XAG/USDSilver Down 44%: Oversold Bottom or Falling Knife — The Case for Each Side

Current Price
$69.74
28 Mar 2026 close
ATH (Feb 2026)
$122.74
Fib 1.0 — parabolic top
Correction
−44%
Steepest from cycle peak on record
Fib 0.786 Support
$64.07
Final structural defence
Prior Breakout Zone
$73.66
Violated — now resistance
Fib 0.618 Resistance
$76.61
Close above = trend reversal
📉
BEARISH INTERMEDIATE TREND — But Oversold Bounce Building at 0.786 Fib
Silver’s correction is more severe than gold’s because silver lacks gold’s pure safe-haven status — it trades as a hybrid between industrial metal and precious metal. The Fed hawkish hold removes the monetary easing tailwind while weakening global PMI data reduces industrial demand expectations. However, the structural supply deficit (fifth consecutive year) remains intact, and silver at $69.74 is already at the top of 2026 major bank consensus ($56–$65), suggesting limited further downside if industrial demand holds. The long lower wick on March 26 off $62 intraday confirms short-covering is beginning at the Fib 0.786 zone.
RSI: ~39 — near oversoldMFI: DecliningSupply deficit: Year 5Trend: Bearish until $76.61 recapture
📌 SILVER — PATIENCE IS THE POSITION: WAIT FOR OVERSOLD CONFIRMATION
Accumulation Zone
$64.07 – $67.00
Fib 0.786 — generational level
Stop Loss (Long)
$60.00
Below structural support
Bull Target 1
$76.61
Fib 0.618 — trend reversal trigger
Bull Target 2
$88.00
Consensus medium-term range top
Trend-Follow Entry
Close above $76.61
Wait for this — don’t front-run
Bear Target (Flush)
$48 – $50
If $64 fails: multi-year support
Week Catalyst
NFP Friday
Weak jobs = silver bounce trigger
R:R (Long from $64)
1 : 3.1
Patient entry, defined risk
Section 06

WTI/USDOil Above $100: Inside the Market Held Hostage by an April 6 Deadline

Current Price
$101.17
28 Mar 2026 close — highest since Jul 2022
War Premium
$14–18/bbl
Goldman Sachs estimate — embedded in Brent
Fib 0.382 Support
$94.75
Range floor — key support this week
Fib 0.236 Zone
~$100
Current trading zone
Range Resistance
$104.15
Top of Hormuz war range
April 6 Deadline
Binary Risk
Ceasefire: −$10–15 / Escalation: +$10–15
⚠ Do Not Hold Unhedged Crude Positions Into the April 6 Weekend The Trump administration’s April 6 deadline for Iran to reopen the Strait of Hormuz creates a binary outcome event that could gap WTI $10–15 in either direction at the weekend open. A confirmed ceasefire would immediately reprice the $14–18/bbl war premium, sending WTI toward $85–88. An escalation or missed deadline would spike WTI toward $115–120. Any trader holding large unhedged crude positions through the April 6 deadline is taking unquantifiable binary risk. Reduce size. Define stops. Consider options hedges.

📈 Technical Structure: The Hormuz Trade Range

WTI has established a Hormuz war range between Fib 0.382 ($94.75) and Fib 0.236 resistance (~$104–106). The pair surged 7.86% today on escalation fears, breaking above $100 with conviction. The $94.75 level is the critical support to watch if the week’s data disappoints or tensions unexpectedly de-escalate. A weekly close above $104.15 would signal a move toward the $115–120 pre-IEA-release highs.

🕯️ Candlestick Context

Today’s strong bullish candle closing near session highs confirms momentum on the long side in the near term. The weekly chart shows three consecutive bullish closes above $90 since the Hormuz closure began March 2. The key risk: a Bearish Engulfing on Powell’s speech (if dovish surprise sends USD lower, reducing oil risk premium) or on a surprise ceasefire announcement.

🌏 Ceasefire Scenario Pricing

A confirmed ceasefire triggers an estimated immediate gap lower of $10–15/bbl as the war premium is repriced. WTI would initially find support at $94.75 (Fib 0.382). However, the structural supply disruption from months of Hormuz closure means the complete rebound in supply would take weeks to months, partially limiting the downside. JPMorgan’s $60/bbl 2026 average would reassert as the fundamental anchor over a 3–6 month horizon.

📊 EIA Wednesday: The Week’s Key Supply Signal

The EIA Weekly Crude Inventory report (Wednesday 14:30 UTC) is forecast to show a draw of −1.2M barrels vs. the prior week’s build of +3.4M bbl. A larger-than-expected draw confirms the supply disruption narrative and supports $100+. A surprise build (possible as US production continues to ramp) could trigger a corrective move toward $94–97. This is the week’s most tradeable crude catalyst outside of the geopolitical binary.

📌 WTI CRUDE — RANGE TRADE: $94.75 SUPPORT / $104.15 RESISTANCE
Range Buy Zone
$94.75 – $97.00
Fib 0.382 — structural floor
Stop Loss (Long)
$91.50
Below Fib 0.382 invalidation
Bull Target
$104.15
Fib 0.236 range top
Range Sell Zone
$103 – $105
Fade war premium ceiling
Stop Loss (Short)
$107.00
War escalation breakout
Bear Target
$94.75
Back to range floor
April 6 Binary
±$10–15/bbl gap
Do NOT hold unhedged into weekend
EIA Wildcard
Wed Apr 1 · 14:30 UTC
Draw confirms; build corrects
Section 07

NATGASNatural Gas at $3.025: The Quiet Opportunity in an Exceptionally Loud Commodity Week

Current Price
$3.025
28 Mar 2026 — NYMEX Henry Hub
EIA 2026 Forecast
$3.80
+26% above current — structural floor
Range Floor (Fib 0)
$2.764
Held for 6+ weeks — critical support
Range Top
$3.881
Fib 0.236 — nearest resistance
Post-Spike High
$7.50
Feb 2026 — Hormuz spike now corrected
EIA Storage Report
Wed · 14:30 UTC
Week’s primary catalyst
“Henry Hub’s structural insulation from Hormuz creates the cleanest risk-reward trade in the commodity complex this week — the EIA’s own forecast is 26% above current prices, and the $2.764 range floor has held for six consecutive weeks.”

Natural gas is this week’s quiet opportunity. Unlike gold (hawkish Fed headwind), silver (industrial demand uncertainty), and crude oil (binary geopolitical risk), Henry Hub natural gas offers a clean, data-driven range trade with a clearly defined support ($2.764), a credible fundamental case (EIA’s 26% undervaluation), and a specific weekly catalyst (Wednesday’s EIA storage report). The trans-Atlantic divergence with European TTF — which has surged 34% since March 1 — adds a relative value angle that sophisticated traders can exploit.

📌 NATURAL GAS — PRIMARY: RANGE BUY AT SUPPORT  |  ALT: SELL BREAK OF $2.764
Bull Entry Zone
$2.764 – $3.00
Range base · structural floor
Stop Loss (Bull)
$2.60
Below range support — invalidation
Bull Target 1
$3.429
Short MA — immediate resistance
Bull Target 2
$3.881
Fib 0.236 — range top
R:R (Bull)
1 : 2.1
EIA forecast supports thesis
Bear Entry (Break)
Close below $2.764
Confirmed daily close break
Bear Stop Loss
$2.95
Re-entry into range
Bear Targets
$2.50 → $2.20
Below-range targets on breakdown
Section 08

How the Four Commodities Connect: The Cross-Asset Architecture You Need to Know

CommodityUSD CorrelationGold CorrelationWTI CorrelationGeopolitical SensitivityNFP ImpactChina PMI ImpactWeek Bias
Gold −0.85 (Inverse) +0.35 HIGH (safe-haven) VERY HIGH (inverse) MEDIUM Watch / Range
Silver −0.72 (Inverse) +0.48 +0.38 MEDIUM VERY HIGH (inverse) HIGH (industrial) Bearish
WTI Crude −0.55 (Inverse) −0.42 1.00 VERY HIGH MEDIUM LOW Range / Geopolit.
Natural Gas −0.25 (Low) +0.18 +0.35 LOW (US domestic) LOW LOW Mildly Bullish Base
Section 09

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is gold falling during a geopolitical crisis — shouldn’t it be rising as a safe haven?
This is 2026’s most important macro paradox. The Hormuz disruption triggered oil-driven inflation, which forced the Federal Reserve into a hawkish hold with zero rate cuts priced for 2026. Higher real Treasury yields increase the opportunity cost of holding gold (which pays no interest), while a stronger USD mechanically suppresses dollar-denominated gold prices. Three bearish forces (higher rates, stronger dollar, energy-driven inflation expectations) are overwhelming one bullish force (geopolitical risk). The resolution will come when the Fed pivots — or when the conflict escalates to a degree that makes dollar safety itself questionable.
Is silver at $69 a buy or a falling knife? The honest case for each side.
The bear case: silver is down 44% from its all-time high, below all major moving averages, with MACD in negative territory and MFI indicating sustained liquidity outflow. The primary trend is down. The bull case: (1) silver is in its fifth consecutive year of structural supply deficit; (2) RSI is approaching oversold territory (~39); (3) major bank consensus for 2026 averages $56–$65, meaning silver is already at the top of the consensus band; (4) industrial demand from solar, EVs, and data centres remains structurally intact. The honest answer: the $64–$67 zone represents a high-conviction accumulation opportunity for patient long-term traders, but trend-followers should wait for a confirmed close above $76.61 before calling the bottom.
What happens to crude oil if Iran and the US reach a ceasefire before the April 6 deadline?
A confirmed ceasefire would likely trigger an immediate gap lower of $10–15/bbl as the $14–18 war premium is repriced. WTI would be expected to fall from the current $101 toward $85–88 (the 0.382 Fib at $94.75 would initially support, but would likely be broken on sustained de-escalation). However, the structural supply disruption from months of Hormuz closure means the complete rebound in supply would take weeks to months, partially limiting the downside. The market would then revert to the pre-war framework where JPMorgan’s $60/bbl 2026 average and Goldman’s $58 Brent target would reassert as the fundamental anchor.
Why is US natural gas so cheap when European gas prices have surged 34% since March 1?
This is the trans-Atlantic LNG divergence trade of 2026. Henry Hub (US benchmark) is insulated from the Hormuz disruption because US natural gas is primarily a domestic market — LNG exports through Gulf of Mexico terminals are not disrupted by Middle East events. European TTF has surged because Europe depends heavily on LNG imports from the Middle East (Qatar, UAE), which are now disrupted. The divergence creates a relative value opportunity: long Henry Hub futures, short European TTF — a pair trade that has historically delivered when this spread widens to current extremes.
What is the single most important event for commodity traders next week?
It’s a three-way tie: (1) Fed Chair Powell’s speech (Monday, March 30) — a hawkish reiteration would hit gold and silver hardest, potentially triggering a $100–150/oz move in gold; (2) Iran/April 6 Deadline — the oil market will be positioned all week for the binary outcome; (3) NFP March Employment Data (Friday, April 3) — a weak print is bullish for gold, bearish for oil and silver; a strong print reinforces the hawkish Fed and is bearish for precious metals. Traders should plan for elevated cross-asset volatility Thursday–Friday as markets price both NFP and the Hormuz deadline risk simultaneously.
What are Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan forecasting for gold by end-2026?
Goldman Sachs targets $4,900/oz for gold by December 2026, driven by continued central bank buying and structurally elevated geopolitical uncertainty. JPMorgan forecasts an average of $4,753/oz for 2026, with the metal expected to reach $5,000/oz by Q4 2026. UBS targets $5,000/oz average. Standard Chartered: $4,800/oz. Bank of America: $4,538 average with a high of $5,000. With gold currently at $4,493, these consensus forecasts suggest meaningful potential upside from corrected levels — but require the Fed hawkish hold to not intensify further.
Section 10

One Week, Three Detonators: Your Complete Commodity Trading Roadmap for March 30 – April 3

The Week of March 30: A Three-Ring Circus for Commodity Traders

If you’re an experienced commodity trader, this isn’t an ordinary week — it’s the kind of week that tests whether your risk management framework is genuinely robust or just theory. You have three independent, simultaneous catalysts capable of moving each commodity by 5–15% on their own: Powell’s speech on Monday, the EIA release on Wednesday, and NFP on Friday — all overlapping with an unresolved Middle East conflict that carries a hard deadline on April 6.

Gold at $4,493 is caught between the hawkish Fed and the geopolitical panic floor. Daily RSI is approaching oversold territory for the first time since the correction began. Wait for the post-Powell reaction on Monday before committing size — a dovish surprise creates a range-trade long to $4,738; a hawkish reiteration opens the path to $4,114. The NFP on Friday is the week’s most powerful gold catalyst: a miss of more than 50K below consensus could be the trigger for the next 5–8% bounce.

Silver at $69.74 is the most asymmetric commodity on the board from a long-term perspective — deeply oversold, structurally supply-deficit, with institutions accumulating at distressed levels. But the intermediate trend is unambiguously bearish. Trend-followers should wait for $76.61 to recapture before calling the bottom. The $62–$64 zone, if reached on a final liquidation flush, represents a generational accumulation opportunity.

WTI at $101.17 is simple in thesis but lethal in execution. The range-trade between $94.75 and $104.15 is the highest-probability positioning — with reduced size and hard stops mandatory given the April 6 binary risk. Do not be the trader who holds an unhedged crude position into the Hormuz deadline weekend.

Natural Gas at $3.025 offers the cleanest risk-reward with the least geopolitical noise. The EIA’s $3.80/MMBtu forecast provides a structural floor for the bull case, and the $2.764 base has held for six weeks. Monday’s PMI data and Wednesday’s EIA storage report are the week’s catalysts.

Above all, this week demands position sizing discipline. The convergence of Powell, EIA, NFP, and the Hormuz deadline creates a volatility environment where normal position sizes carry exceptional tail risk. Reduce size. Define stops before entry. The traders who preserve capital through a complex week are the ones positioned to capture the cleaner opportunities that emerge once the dust settles.

⚠ Risk Disclaimer: This report is published by Capital Street FX (CSFX) Research Division for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, investment recommendations, or a solicitation to trade. All prices and levels cited are sourced from TradingView, Reuters, Bloomberg, Investing.com, EIA, IEA, LiteFinance, FX Leaders, and CSFX internal analysis as of Friday, March 28, 2026. Markets move rapidly — always verify live prices with your broker before executing any trade. Fibonacci levels, trade setups, and price targets are technical observations and may not represent actual future price movements. Trading leveraged instruments involves substantial risk of loss and may not be suitable for all investors. © 2026 Capital Street FX Research Division. All rights reserved.
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Commodity Intelligence Report · Issue 88 · 28 March 2026 © 2026 Capital Street FX Research Division · capitalstreetfx.com