Commodities webinar

Gold slips as macro headwinds intensify and crowded longs unwind

Picture of Ole Hansen
Ole Hansen

Head of Commodity Strategy

Key Points:

  • Gold's stall reflects a shift in macro drivers: higher energy costs driving firmer inflation expectations leading to fewer or later rate cuts.
  • The US dollar has strengthened on safe-haven flows and energy dynamics, offsetting gold's geopolitical bid.
  • A technical break below USD 5,000 and a renewed surge in energy prices have triggered momentum selling and profit taking from a crowded long
  • Silver's high-beta link to gold, combined with rising concerns about economic growth and demand, may weigh more heavily on the white metal as longs continue to exit a crowded trade.

Gold continues to struggle for momentum, with the risk of a deeper correction building after the break below the 50-day moving average, last around USD 4,978. While geopolitical risk in the Middle East would normally support prices, several offsetting forces have emerged.

First, the war’s impact on energy markets has lifted inflation expectations at a time when central banks were already cautious about easing. The surge in oil and refined product prices—particularly diesel—has reduced the likelihood of near-term rate cuts and, in some cases, pushed market pricing toward a “higher-for-longer” rate outlook. This has supported real yields, a key headwind for non-yielding assets such as gold.

Second, the US dollar has strengthened. In the current environment, geopolitical stress combined with rising energy prices tends to channel capital into dollar-denominated assets. This creates a competing safe-haven dynamic where gold’s traditional role is partly diluted by a firmer dollar.

Third, positioning and technicals are playing an important role. Gold has been one of the most profitable and crowded trades over the past couple of years, supported by central bank buying, geopolitical hedging, and debasement concerns. The recent break below key technical levels has triggered momentum-driven selling, while the broader risk-off tone has led investors to reduce profitable exposures to raise liquidity.

Finally, the nature of the current shock matters. This is primarily a supply-driven inflation shock, not a demand-driven one. Central banks have limited ability to counter such inflation without risking further economic damage, but markets still respond by repricing rates expectations higher. That combination—sticky inflation and constrained policy response—creates an uncertain backdrop for gold in the short term.

Silver, meanwhile, has pulled back more sharply, breaking below USD 78 potentially signaling a deeper retracement. In addition to following gold lower, it is more sensitive to growth expectations due to its industrial use, with copper trading sharply lower as well today. Concerns that higher energy costs will weigh on global activity have added an additional layer of pressure, while its higher volatility and leverage to speculative positioning amplify the downside during corrections.

In short, gold’s failure to break higher despite geopolitical stress reflects a temporary dominance of macro and technical headwinds—higher real yields, a stronger dollar, and position adjustment—over its traditional safe-haven appeal.

18olh_gc1
The spread between Fed Funds and end of year expectations continues to narrow with just one cut now priced in - Source: Bloomberg
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Gold - Source: Saxo
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Silver - Source: 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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