2026_Gold rates war

Gold: Near-term headwinds meet longer-term structural support

Commodities 5 minutes to read
Ole Hansen
Ole Hansen

Head of Commodity Strategy

Key points:

  • Gold trades at the lower end of a USD 1,500 correction range established between the January high at USD 5,595 and March low at USD 4,100.
  • Higher energy-driven inflation expectations and rising bond yields are currently overshadowing long-held supportive drivers, notably fiscal debt concerns, investor and central bank reserve diversification, and ongoing de-dollarisation trends.
  • ETF flows and volatility indicators point to subdued participation and a market awaiting a clearer catalyst, either technical or fundamental driven.

Gold continues its week-long consolidation phase after a historic rally that carried bullion to a January peak near USD 5,595 before correcting sharply to a March low near USD 4,100. At around USD 4,550, bullion still trades up roughly 5% year-to-date and 40% over the past year, but it remains near the lower end of the approximately USD 1,500 correction range established during the first quarter.

The current environment highlights an increasingly important distinction between what traders are focusing on in the short term and what investors continue to monitor over the longer term. While the structural investment case for gold remains largely intact, shorter-term macro developments have created a more challenging backdrop for prices.

From a trader perspective, attention remains centred on energy prices, inflation expectations, bond yields and the dollar. The Middle East crisis and associated disruptions across energy markets have lifted inflation expectations at a time when markets had been preparing for lower interest rates. Higher energy prices feed directly into inflation and, by extension, government bond yields, while also lending support to the US dollar.

This combination has created a challenging environment for bullion. Rising yields increase the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset, while a stronger dollar tends to weigh on demand from non-dollar investors. As a result, the normal safe-haven response has become less straightforward. Under the current reaction function, an escalation in geopolitical tensions can at times weigh on gold if it triggers another rise in energy prices and inflation expectations.

Technically, gold has in the very short term settled into a narrow USD 4,500 to 4,590 range, with prices compressing around key Fibonacci retracement levels. The broader setup remains constrained by two important moving averages. The 200-day moving average, currently near USD 4,355, represents the next major support level, while the 50-day moving average around USD 4,705 continues to cap upside attempts.

 

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Spot gold with technical levels - Source: Saxo
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Spot Gold, five-year chart - Source: Saxo

Investor positioning supports the view of a market waiting for direction. ETF holdings have largely flat-lined over the past month, suggesting a lack of strong fresh conviction, while volatility continues to decline. Average True Range has fallen to a four-month low, pointing to increasingly compressed trading conditions and a market potentially building toward a larger directional move once either the technical or fundamental picture becomes clearer.

Another factor potentially weighing on prices may be forced or tactical selling from some central banks. Several energy-importing countries are facing sharply higher fuel costs and increased pressure on local currencies from rising dollar-denominated import bills. Under such conditions, some official-sector holders may be selling gold either to defend currencies or help finance elevated energy purchases. This does not necessarily undermine the broader official-sector demand story, but it may help explain some of gold's muted response to geopolitical stress.

In our opinion, longer term investors continue to focus on a different set of drivers. Rising fiscal debt burdens, particularly in the United States, have regained attention as higher Treasury yields increase interest servicing costs. At the same time, sticky inflation continues to challenge traditional fixed-income returns, while reserve diversification and de-dollarisation trends remain supportive themes.

Once immediate energy-related pressures begin to ease, central bank demand may re-emerge as a more dominant driver. For now, gold remains caught between near-term macro headwinds and longer-term structural support, leaving bullion in a holding pattern with no clear direction while markets await greater clarity.

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Gold investment flows in ETFs and futures, as well as short-term correlations with dollar and US real yields - Source: Bloomberg & Saxo
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Educational resources:
A short guide to trading crude oil
The basics of trading wheat online
A short guide to trading gold
A short guide to trading copper
A short guide to trading silver
Gold, silver, and platinum: Are precious metals a safe haven investment?

Daily podcasts hosted by John J Hardy can be found here


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