Commodities at the Crossroads: Gold Rebounds on Iran Talks, Oil Retreats from $100, Silver & Copper Stage Recovery | Capital Street FX Commodities Report — April 14, 2026
Commodities at the Crossroads: Gold Rebounds on Iran Dialogue, WTI Retreats from $100, Silver & Copper Stage Technical Recoveries
Gold at $4,761.78 (+0.36%) claws back losses as US-Iran resume ceasefire talks, with the metal testing its critical 0.5 Fibonacci level at $4,741. WTI Crude at $97.31 (-0.70%) retreats after Monday’s blockade-driven spike to near-$100, with the 0.382 Fib at $97.82 now acting as pivotal resistance-turned-support. Silver at $76.67 (+1.48%) bounces off the 0.618 Fib zone ($76.57) for a third consecutive weekly gain. Copper at $6.07 (+0.35%) breaks above a descending wedge with RSI momentum building. Capital Street FX Commodities Research Desk · April 14, 2026
Iran Ceasefire Dialogue Rescues Commodities — But the Geopolitical Premium Hangs by a Thread
Today’s commodity session is defined by cautious relief: President Trump confirmed Iran has reached out to resume negotiations before the two-week ceasefire expires, prompting WTI to pull back from near-$100 and gold to consolidate above the key 0.5 Fibonacci level at $4,741. The broader picture, however, remains fragile. The US Navy’s Hormuz blockade — enacted Monday after Pakistan talks collapsed — has now disrupted an estimated 9.1 million barrels per day of supply according to the EIA, the largest oil disruption in history. US CPI for March came in at 3.3% (with energy +10.9% MoM), while the March PPI print due at 08:30 ET today will be the next key inflation flashpoint for commodity positioning. Across the metals complex, silver leads the daily move at +1.48%, bouncing from the 0.618 Fib ($76.57), while copper’s breakout above a descending wedge and reclaim of the 0.618 Fib on RSI both point toward a constructive technical regime shift.
- 🥇 Gold at 0.5 Fibonacci ($4,741.24): Price at $4,761 is holding above this critical level — Iran dialogue news and a softer dollar are providing the near-term floor, though the $4,942 (0.382 Fib) is the key recovery target
- 🥈 Silver bouncing from 0.618 Fib ($76.57): Third consecutive weekly gain; the solar/EV structural deficit of ~67M oz in 2026 and LME inventory at 13.4% COMEX coverage underpin dip-buying
- 🛢️ WTI retreating from near-$100 blockade spike: Iran-US dialogue hopes drive pullback from Monday’s $99.08 close; 0.382 Fib resistance at $97.82 is now acting as a pivot — a hold here could re-test $90 range
- 🔶 Copper breaks descending wedge at $6.07: RSI momentum building above 50; LME inventory at 8-year high reflects demand headwinds, but EV/AI structural deficit narrative provides medium-term support
- 📊 US PPI (Mar) due today, Fed Beige Book tomorrow: February PPI ran at +3.4% YoY, +0.7% MoM — a hotter-than-expected March print could pressure metals via dollar strength; a miss would be broadly bullish
Today’s Best Commodity Opportunities
Instrument Analysis
Technical Analysis
Gold is trading at $4,761.78 on the daily timeframe, recovering modestly after Monday’s sharp pullback to $4,658 when US-Iran Islamabad talks collapsed. The Fibonacci retracement from the all-time high of $5,595.38 (Jan 29) to the recent swing low at $3,887.10 gives us the key levels the market is now working around. Price is currently sitting just above the critical 0.5 Fibonacci level at $4,741.24, which has acted as both support and resistance multiple times over the past two weeks. A confirmed daily close above this level is the minimum requirement for any bullish continuity.
The 50-day and 200-day moving averages are converging from below (visible on the daily chart), with the fast MA at $4,895 and the slow MA at $4,647 — gold is currently trading between these two. The RSI stands at 50.30 (daily), recovering from deeply oversold readings near 44 seen just last week. This RSI structure is constructive but has not confirmed a full momentum reversal. A daily close above $4,800 would go a long way to re-establishing a bullish thesis heading into the next Fibonacci recovery target at $4,942 (0.382 retracement).
The chart structure shows price exiting from a descending channel that has contained the correction since the January all-time high, with the most recent candle posting a small bullish rejection off the 0.5 Fib level. However, the broader descending structure from $5,595 to $4,090 remains intact until $4,942 is decisively broken to the upside.
Fundamental Drivers
The dominant fundamental narrative for gold in April 2026 is the US-Iran conflict and its secondary effects on inflation, rate expectations, and safe-haven flows. The reopening of ceasefire dialogue — with Iran reportedly contacting Washington on April 14 — is the immediate catalyst for today’s bounce. However, the fragility of the truce means geopolitical risk premium remains elevated.
The macro environment is deeply conflicted for gold. On one hand, US CPI for March surged to 3.3% YoY with a 0.9% MoM jump (the steepest since mid-2022), largely driven by a 21.2% monthly energy spike. This inflation reading reduces the probability of Fed rate cuts, which is negative for non-yielding gold. Markets now assign just a 30% probability of any cut by December 2026. On the other hand, geopolitical uncertainty, a structurally weaker dollar trajectory, and central bank buying (China’s reserves at an all-time high of ~2,309t) provide a structural floor. J.P. Morgan maintains its year-end target toward $5,000, while State Street’s April Gold Monitor frames the current $4,750–$4,942 range as the base case floor for H2 2026.
The March PPI print released today is the immediate macro catalyst. February PPI ran at +0.7% MoM and +3.4% YoY — a hotter March reading would pressure gold through the monetary policy channel, while a cooler reading would revive rate cut expectations and likely push gold toward $4,900+.
Technical Patterns & Key Levels
The most critical technical event to watch for gold is a confirmed daily close above the $4,800 psychological level, which would open the door to the 0.382 Fib resistance at $4,942.82. Below that, $4,741.24 (0.5 Fib) is now the line in the sand — a daily close below this level would signal a test of $4,539.66 (0.618 Fib), which is approximately where gold traded during its March low.
| Level | Price | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ATH / 0 Fib | $5,595.38 | Resistance | January 29 all-time high |
| 0.236 Fib | $5,192.23 | Resistance | First major retracement level |
| 0.382 Fib | $4,942.82 | Resistance | Primary recovery target — key bull trigger |
| Current Price | $4,761.78 | Trading | Just above 0.5 Fib — pivotal zone |
| 0.5 Fib | $4,741.24 | Support | Must hold — failure opens $4,539 test |
| 0.618 Fib | $4,539.66 | Support | March low area / deep support |
| 0.786 Fib | $4,243.67 | Deep Support | Bear scenario target |
| Swing Low / 1 Fib | $3,887.10 | Extreme Support | Full retracement level |
Technical Analysis
Silver is showing relative strength today at +1.48%, outperforming gold’s modest +0.36% gain. The daily chart presents a Fibonacci retracement from the January 29 all-time high of $122.20 to the correction low, with the current price of $76.67 sitting right at the critical 0.618 Fibonacci level at $76.57. This level has repeatedly acted as support over the past few weeks, creating a potential base for the next leg of the recovery.
The RSI on the daily chart stands at 51.28 (up from a recent low of 44.59), crossing above the 50 midline — a constructive signal that favors buyers. The price action over the last two sessions has printed a morning-star-type reversal pattern, with Monday’s sell-off to the $73 range sharply reclaimed. The 50-day moving average ($79.04) sits just above current price, while the 200-day MA ($73.08) provides a rising floor. Silver remains in its third consecutive weekly gain, consistent with broader precious metals momentum.
The immediate resistance is the $79 area where the 50-day MA converges with the prior rejection zone. Above that, the 0.5 Fib at $85.28 is the primary target for a sustained recovery. The descending trendline from the January high has been progressively tested, and a daily close above $79 would be a meaningful bullish breakout signal.
Fundamental Drivers
Silver’s fundamental case in 2026 is one of the most compelling across commodity markets, with three distinct demand pillars converging simultaneously. The Silver Institute projects a sixth consecutive annual supply deficit of approximately 67 million ounces for 2026. COMEX registered silver inventory has fallen to just 76 million ounces, representing only 13.4% coverage of open interest — a historically tight level that forces physical buyers to compete aggressively.
Industrial demand is accelerating structurally. Solar photovoltaic silver demand is on track to reach 10,000–14,000 tonnes annually by 2030, while EV manufacturing uses approximately 25–50 grams of silver per vehicle — nearly double the amount in conventional cars. China’s silver imports hit their highest level in eight years in early 2026. Meanwhile, data center and AI hardware represent an emerging but growing demand vector. J.P. Morgan’s global research team forecasts silver averaging $81/oz for 2026, while Bank of America’s more aggressive models target $135–$309 based on COMEX inventory tightness scenarios.
The main risk remains the macro environment: the Iran war’s inflationary impact via oil prices has caused markets to price out Fed rate cuts (now just 30% probability for December), which is structurally negative for silver’s investment demand. However, with the 0.618 Fib holding as support and structural deficits intact, silver represents the best risk-reward setup in the commodity space today according to our analysis.
Technical Patterns & Key Levels
Silver’s near-term setup is the most technically constructive of the four commodities covered today. The combination of a key Fibonacci support level holding, RSI crossing 50, and a third weekly gain creates a multi-timeframe alignment that favors buyers on dips. The 0.5 Fib at $85.28 is the primary recovery target, with the 0.382 Fib at $93.99 as the secondary target in a full recovery scenario.
| Level | Price | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ATH / 0 Fib | $122.20 | Resistance | January 29 all-time high |
| 0.236 Fib | $104.77 | Resistance | Major recovery target (medium-term) |
| 0.382 Fib | $93.99 | Resistance | Secondary bull target |
| 0.5 Fib | $85.28 | Resistance / Target | Primary recovery target from today’s bounce |
| Current Price | $76.67 | Trading | Bouncing off 0.618 Fib support |
| 0.618 Fib | $76.57 | Support | Critical support — must hold for bull case |
| 0.786 Fib | $64.16 | Deep Support | Bear case target if $76.57 breaks |
Technical Analysis
WTI crude has experienced an extraordinary rally from the $61.74 swing low (early January 2026) to a high of $120.12, driven by the US-Iran conflict and the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz from late February. The current price of $97.31 places it at a critical Fibonacci juncture: the 0.382 retracement from the $120.12 high is at $97.82, creating a resistance-turned-support zone that the market is currently straddling.
Today’s session shows a -0.70% pullback as Iran-US dialogue hopes dampen the blockade premium. The RSI on the daily chart stands at 61.13, down from the overbought zone above 75 seen when prices spiked above $106 last week. The moving averages paint a strongly bullish medium-term picture — the 50-day MA has crossed above the 200-day MA (golden cross) with both sloping sharply upward, reflecting the war-driven momentum. However, the RSI’s decline from overbought suggests near-term consolidation or further pullback toward the $90.93 zone (0.5 Fib) is possible if ceasefire talks progress.
The key technical inflection point is whether $97.82 (0.382 Fib) holds as support on a daily closing basis. A hold here suggests WTI may consolidate in the $97–$105 range pending diplomatic outcomes. A break below $97.82 targeting $90.93 would require a more significant geopolitical de-escalation scenario.
Fundamental Drivers
WTI crude is dominated entirely by the US-Iran conflict and the Hormuz supply disruption — the most significant oil supply shock in history. The EIA has revised its 2026 average Brent price forecast to $96/barrel (up from $78.84), while WTI has been revised to $87.41/barrel — though current spot prices well above those averages reflect the ongoing crisis premium. The effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz has disrupted an estimated 9.1 million barrels per day at peak (April 2026), with global inventories drawing at approximately 5.1 million bpd in Q2 2026.
The diplomatic timeline is the primary near-term driver. The US imposed a naval blockade on Iranian ports on April 13 after Pakistan talks failed — but Trump confirmed on April 14 that Iran has reached out to resume negotiations. A two-week ceasefire technically remains in place. OPEC+ output fell 7.9 million bpd in March due to the Strait’s closure, while Saudi Arabia has activated the East-West pipeline (5 million bpd via Red Sea / Yanbu) as its primary export outlet. Meanwhile, the IEA and the US have coordinated emergency stock releases, though these have only partially offset disruptions.
The structural supply situation means oil is unlikely to revisit pre-war levels of $60 in the near term. Even in a ceasefire scenario, the EIA notes that restoring full Hormuz traffic flow and normalizing production could take months. The 2026 average is expected to remain elevated, with LiteFinance’s April range model showing WTI between $82.72 and $133.91 for the month.
Technical Patterns & Key Levels
WTI’s technical setup is mixed on a short-term basis. The RSI’s decline from overbought and the 0.382 Fib resistance at $97.82 suggest near-term consolidation risk. However, the strongly upward-sloping moving averages and the unprecedented supply disruption provide a structural floor well above pre-war levels. Any diplomatic breakthrough would likely see an initial sharp pullback to $90.93 (0.5 Fib), but full normalization of the Hormuz supply chain would likely take months, keeping the medium-term floor elevated.
| Level | Price | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Swing High / 0 Fib | $120.12 | Resistance | All-time cycle high during Hormuz closure peak |
| 0.236 Fib | $106.34 | Resistance | Recent April high ~$106.73 near this level |
| 0.382 Fib | $97.82 | Resistance / Pivot | Key pivot — must hold for near-term bull case |
| Current Price | $97.31 | Trading | Testing 0.382 Fib pivot zone |
| 0.5 Fib | $90.93 | Support / Target | Key target in ceasefire/de-escalation scenario |
| 0.618 Fib | $84.04 | Support | Medium-term support in negotiated peace scenario |
| 0.786 Fib | $74.24 | Deep Support | Full normalization scenario target |
| Swing Low / 1 Fib | $61.74 | Extreme Support | Pre-war levels |
Technical Analysis
Copper on the daily COMEX chart has staged a meaningful technical breakout today. After a prolonged correction from the all-time high zone near $6.63 (reached in late January 2026), price has been working through a clearly defined descending wedge pattern with lower highs and lower lows since February. Today’s candle is breaking above the upper boundary of this wedge at approximately $6.03–$6.05, with price printing $6.07 on confirming volume.
The key Fibonacci levels from the chart show the 0.618 retracement at $5.94 has already been reclaimed and is now acting as support, while today’s move pushes back toward the 0.786 Fib at approximately $6.33 as the next significant resistance. The 50-day MA (shown in orange on the chart at $5.73) is below current price, while the 200-day MA (lower orange line at $5.66) is rising — a constructive alignment. The RSI at 64.67 (daily) is building momentum above 50, with the signal line at 50.49 just crossing above the midline — a bullish RSI crossover that has historically preceded extended rallies in copper.
The critical technical test for copper is whether today’s breakout above the descending wedge can sustain a close above $6.10 (the 0.613 Fib on the chart). A confirmed close above $6.10 targets $6.33 (0.786 Fib) as the next resistance, with the original 1.0 Fibonacci level at $6.63 as the bull case target. The risk scenario is a failed breakout and return below $5.80.
Fundamental Drivers
Copper’s fundamental narrative in 2026 is bifurcated between a compelling long-term structural story and near-term macro headwinds. On the bull side: J.P. Morgan projects a global refined copper deficit of approximately 330,000 metric tonnes for 2026, with mine supply growth forecasts trimmed to just +1.4% after supply disruptions at Grasberg (Indonesia), Quebrada Blanca (Chile), and Peruvian operations. The AI and data center buildout is creating a new demand vertical — data centers can use up to 10x the electrical load of traditional facilities, consuming approximately 475,000 metric tonnes of copper in 2026 installations according to J.P. Morgan estimates.
The tariff wildcard is the key near-term catalyst. The US Section 232 investigation into copper imports is expected to result in a tariff recommendation by mid-2026, with Goldman Sachs’ base case at 15% and others modeling 25%+. The anticipation of these tariffs has already driven US COMEX inventories to historically elevated levels as importers front-run the tariff, which has paradoxically tightened physical availability outside the US and supported LME premiums. However, this dynamic also means LME inventories have risen to an 8-year high — reflecting weaker physical demand outside the US.
China’s copper consumption remains a key swing factor. Goldman Sachs notes Chinese refined copper demand fell approximately -8% YoY in Q4 2025, a more acute slowdown than prior cycles. Recovery in Chinese industrial activity — particularly through the 15th Five Year Plan infrastructure buildout starting 2026 — could be the demand catalyst that resolves the tariff/inventory dynamic bullishly.
Technical Patterns & Key Levels
The descending wedge breakout on the copper daily chart is today’s most actionable technical setup. After a prolonged corrective phase since the January high near $6.63, the structure of lower highs and lower lows is now being challenged. RSI divergence (price making lower lows while RSI formed higher lows) preceded this breakout, suggesting the corrective momentum has exhausted. The 0.786 Fib at $6.33 and the original high at $6.63 are the two targets for bulls on a sustained close above $6.10.
| Level | Price | Type | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 Fib (Swing High) | $6.63 | Resistance | January 2026 cycle high near Fib extension 1.0 |
| 0.786 Fib | $6.34 | Resistance | Next significant target after wedge breakout |
| 0.613 Fib | $6.11 | Resistance | Wedge breakout confirmation level — key close |
| Current Price | $6.07 | Trading | Breaking above descending wedge upper boundary |
| 0.5 Fib | $5.95 | Support | Recently reclaimed — now acting as support |
| 0.382 Fib | $5.79 | Support | 50-day MA confluence zone |
| 0.236 Fib | $5.59 | Support | 200-day MA zone / deeper support |
| 0 Fib (Swing Low) | $5.27 | Extreme Support | Full correction target / bear case |
The Big Picture: What’s Driving Commodities in April 2026
1. The US-Iran Conflict and Hormuz Disruption
The defining event for commodity markets in 2026 is the US-Israel strike on Iran’s nuclear facilities on February 28, followed by the closure of the Strait of Hormuz — the world’s most critical energy chokepoint, through which approximately 20% of global oil supply previously flowed. The effective shutdown has triggered the largest oil supply disruption in recorded history, with OPEC+ output falling 7.9 million barrels per day in March alone. Oil prices have surged more than 50% from pre-war levels. As of April 14, a fragile two-week ceasefire is technically in place — but Iran-US negotiations in Pakistan broke down over the weekend, prompting the US Navy to begin a formal blockade of Iranian ports on April 13. The conflict’s impact now extends beyond oil: the inflationary shockwave (CPI at 3.3% YoY, energy component +10.9% MoM in March) is pressuring Fed rate cut expectations, creating a headwind for precious metals even as the geopolitical safe-haven bid remains active.
2. Macro Policy: Fed on Hold, Rates Elevated
The Federal Reserve has been forced into a difficult position by the conflict. Prior to the Iran war, markets were pricing 58 basis points of cumulative easing in 2026. Today, CME FedWatch shows just 30% probability of any rate cut by December 2026, with the Fed maintaining its 3.50–3.75% policy rate. February PPI ran at +3.4% YoY, and the March PPI print being released today will be closely watched. A hotter reading would further reduce rate cut expectations, potentially weighing on gold and silver. A cooler print — possible if energy volatility masked the underlying trend — would revive the metals rally. Tomorrow’s Fed Beige Book will provide qualitative insight into how the conflict is transmitting through the real economy. The April 29 FOMC meeting is the next policy event, with no rate change expected.
3. Central Bank Gold Demand: Structural Support Intact
Despite the market volatility of Q1 2026, central bank gold demand remains a structural pillar for gold prices. China’s official gold reserves have reached an all-time high of approximately 2,309 tonnes, with continuous purchases recorded every month. J.P. Morgan projects total central bank and institutional investor gold demand of approximately 585 tonnes per quarter in 2026 — averaging around 190 tonnes per quarter from central banks alone. This demand floor has been a key reason gold has held above $4,700 despite the inflationary headwinds that would normally suppress the metal. State Street’s April Gold Monitor frames the current range as a “down but not out” consolidation, maintaining a 50% base-case projection of $4,750–$5,500 into year-end, with a $5,000+ target on any diplomatic resolution that eases inflation expectations.
4. Silver: The Structural Deficit Story of the Decade
Silver’s fundamental case stands out as one of the most compelling in all commodities. The metal faces its sixth consecutive annual supply deficit in 2026, estimated at approximately 67 million ounces by the Silver Institute. COMEX registered inventory has fallen to just 76 million ounces — representing only 13.4% coverage of open interest, a historically tight level that has historically preceded sharp price appreciation. Industrial demand is growing from multiple vectors simultaneously: solar photovoltaic silver use is projected to grow to 10,000–14,000 tonnes annually by 2030; EVs use approximately double the silver of conventional vehicles; and AI data center infrastructure creates a new and growing demand channel. China’s silver imports reached their highest level in eight years in early 2026, suggesting restocking demand is accelerating despite the broader global uncertainty.
5. Copper: The AI and Energy Transition Metal
Copper occupies a unique position in 2026, caught between a genuinely bullish long-term structural story and a more complex near-term reality. The long-term case is clear: BloombergNEF estimates copper demand from the energy transition could triple by 2045, with structural deficits emerging as early as 2026. Data centers and AI infrastructure can use up to 10x the electrical load of traditional facilities, and the copper intensity of the global economy is rising materially with the transition to electrification. However, the near-term picture is more nuanced: LME inventories have risen to an 8-year high as US importers front-run potential tariffs under Section 232, Chinese demand has weakened materially, and the Iran conflict’s deflationary impact on global growth poses a demand headwind. The key catalyst to watch is the US copper tariff decision expected by mid-2026, which Goldman Sachs models as a 15% tariff — an announcement that could trigger a sharp but temporary dislocation before medium-term fundamentals reassert.
Key Commodity Events: April 14–16, 2026
| Date / Time (ET) | Event | Impact | Previous | Forecast | Actual | Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Apr 14 · 08:30 | US PPI (Final Demand MoM) – March | HIGH | +0.7% | +0.5%e | PENDING | Gold, Silver, Oil – key inflation signal for Fed rate path |
| Apr 14 · 08:30 | US PPI (YoY) – March | HIGH | +3.4% | +3.3%e | PENDING | All commodities – hotter reading pressures metals via USD |
| Apr 14 · ONGOING | US-Iran Ceasefire / Blockade Developments | HIGH | Talks collapsed Apr 12 | Dialogue resumed Apr 14 | LIVE | WTI Crude, Gold – primary driver; any deal spikes metals, crashes oil |
| Apr 15 · 14:00 | Federal Reserve Beige Book | HIGH | Mar edition | – | TOMORROW | Gold, Silver – watch for conflict impact on US economic activity |
| Apr 15 | IEA Monthly Market Report | HIGH | March report | – | TOMORROW | WTI Crude – global supply-demand balance update |
| Apr 16 · 08:30 | US Initial Jobless Claims | MED | 223K | 220Ke | THURSDAY | Gold – labor market health signals rate cut timing |
| Apr 29 | Federal Reserve Rate Decision | HIGH | 3.50–3.75% | Hold expected | UPCOMING | All commodities – 0% probability of April cut; watch statement |
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