Quarterly Outlook
Q4 Outlook for Investors: Diversify like it’s 2025 – don’t fall for déjà vu
Jacob Falkencrone
Global Head of Investment Strategy
Head of Commodity Strategy
Gold and silver enter the second week of January facing a familiar but often misunderstood near-term headwind: the annual rebalancing of major commodity indices such as the S&P GSCI and the Bloomberg Commodity Index. This once-yearly, rules-based process runs over five business days starting today and during this time index-tracking funds realign their futures exposure back to predefined target weights after a year of uneven price performance.
In years with modest dispersion across commodities, the rebalancing is usually a low-key affair. After 2025, however, it is anything but. Gold surged more than 60% last year, while silver delivered its strongest annual performance since 1979 with gains close to 150%. Additional gains into early 2026 further inflated their index weights, leaving passive funds mechanically over-exposed relative to target allocations.
As gold and silver outperformed, their weightings within commodity benchmarks rose automatically. Rebalancing reverses this drift. Index providers reset weights using pre-defined rules based on liquidity and production data, and index-tracking funds are then required to sell futures in commodities that have become overweight and reallocate toward those that lagged.
Crucially, these flows are price-insensitive. They are not a judgement on fundamentals, valuation or macro outlook, but a mechanical consequence of index construction. Even so, when concentrated into a short execution window, they can temporarily distort price action and liquidity—particularly in contracts with elevated speculative positioning.
Following last year’s exceptional performance, precious metals will have to absorb some of the largest notional rebalancing flows across the commodity complex. Bank estimates suggest that combined selling of gold and silver futures could reach USD 6–7 billion in each metal during the rebalancing window.
Silver stands out in relative terms. Estimates indicate potential selling equivalent to around 10–12% of average daily turnover, or roughly low-double-digit percentages of COMEX open interest. These are large numbers in headline terms and explain why silver has already experienced sharp two-day declines of around 8%, with gold also coming under pressure.
That said, context matters. The recent sell-off has so far unwound only about half of silver’s early-January gains, suggesting that dip-buyers remain active and that selling pressure has, at least initially, been absorbed rather than cascaded. It is also worth noting that platinum is not included in these indices and, while it is not exposed to rebalancing-related selling, price action may still be influenced by broader sentiment spilling over from gold and silver.
A key point often lost in the rebalancing narrative is that index adjustments operate entirely in the paper futures market. The physical gold and silver markets are unaffected by these flows, and in silver’s case, underlying fundamentals remain notably tight.
Industrial demand linked to electrification, solar installations and electronics continues to grow, while mine supply and recycled output have struggled to keep pace. This divergence helps explain why the price impact of rebalancing-related selling may be more muted than the headline notional figures imply.
Gold’s case is different but equally resilient. While less exposed to industrial demand, gold continues to benefit from strong central-bank buying, concerns about fiscal sustainability, and investor demand for portfolio diversification amid elevated geopolitical and macro uncertainty. None of these drivers change because an index resets its weights.
Rebalancing-related selling has been well telegraphed for months. This reduces the risk of disorderly price action and increases the likelihood that a significant portion of the adjustment is already priced in. As a result, the market’s behaviour during the rebalancing window may be more informative than the flows themselves.
If gold and silver stabilise or rebound despite ongoing mechanical selling, it would signal strong underlying demand and suggest that recent rallies were not purely momentum- or FOMO-driven. Conversely, an inability to absorb these flows could point to a more fragile positioning backdrop and raise the risk of a deeper, albeit still technical, correction.
Key signals to watch include changes in open interest, intraday liquidity conditions, and whether price weakness is concentrated around predictable execution windows or spills over into broader trading hours.
The annual commodity index rebalancing is a short-lived but powerful technical force, particularly after an outsized year like 2025. For gold and silver, it represents a mechanical test rather than a fundamental verdict. While near-term volatility risks are elevated, any weakness driven by rebalancing flows should be viewed through a technical lens.
Once the process concludes, attention is likely to shift back to the structural forces that drove last year’s rally. How gold and silver emerge from this five-day window may therefore offer a valuable signal about the durability of demand as 2026 unfolds.
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