- Gold fell 1.05% to $4,791 on April 15, 2026, as U.S.-Iran diplomacy reduced safe-haven demand on COMEX.
- The Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.59% to 24,016.02, logging its 11th straight daily gain on tech strength.
- Bitcoin held near $74,175 above key support, buoyed by spot ETF inflows despite resistance at $75,000.
Gold pulled back from an intraday high of $4,871.51 on the COMEX, settling near $4,800 per troy ounce, a decline of approximately 1.05% on the day. Traders reduced safe-haven positions after optimism grew around potential U.S.-Iran renegotiations and a possible ceasefire extension, which eased concerns over disruptions to oil flows through the Strait of Hormuz.
A weaker U.S. dollar, hovering near a six-week low, offered some support for gold, but profit-taking and shifting risk sentiment dominated. Technical levels remained in focus, with analysts noting that acceptance above $4,900 would be required to sustain an uptrend.
Silver moved in the opposite direction, gaining approximately 1.6% to close near $80.87 per ounce. Industrial demand expectations and the weaker dollar drove the move, with intraday levels holding in the $79 to $80-plus range throughout the session.
The S&P 500 closed at a record 7,022.95, up 0.80% on the day, marking its first all-time closing high since late January. Buying was broad-based outside of energy and industrial names, which lagged as oil prices declined.

S&P 500 on April 15, 2026, via Tradingview.
The Nasdaq Composite climbed 1.59% to 24,016.02, logging its 11th consecutive daily gain. Marketwatch described it as one of the longest winning streaks in recent years, with technology stocks anchoring the advance throughout the session.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average slipped 0.15% to 48,463.72. Cyclical sectors tied to energy and industrials weighed on the index as lower oil prices reduced near-term earnings expectations for those names.
The 10-year U.S. Treasury yield opened at 4.242% on April 15, easing from early-April highs near 4.34% following March CPI data that showed a 0.9% monthly increase, the largest since June 2022, pushing the annual rate to 3.3%. Core inflation came in softer than the headline figure, but energy-driven pressure kept rate-cut expectations limited.
Fed funds futures and CME’s Fedwatch tool continues to reflect a “higher for longer” view, with markets pricing the Federal Reserve on hold at 3.5% to 3.75% through May. Uncertainty around Fed Chair Jerome Powell’s planned exit added another layer of caution to rate forecasts.
Bitcoin opened near $74,175, down approximately 0.4% on the day, but held above key support levels. The asset has gained roughly 12.3% since geopolitical tensions escalated earlier in the month, supported by continued institutional inflows into spot exchange-traded funds (ETFs). The $75,000 and $76,000 levels remain stiff resistance points.
ETF demand continues to provide a structural bid for bitcoin, alongside company grabs from the likes of Strategy, limiting the impact of headline risk from ongoing Iran-related developments.
Markets across asset classes remain sensitive to any reversal in ceasefire talks or new energy shocks that could reignite inflationary pressure and safe-haven demand.
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