Gold strings together a fourth month of losses: fever broken?
After record highs early in the year, gold keeps falling. What is behind it and what the banks expect for the rest of 2026.
Anyone who bought gold at peak euphoria has had a queasy few weeks. The metal that looked unstoppable closed June heading for a fourth straight monthly drop, hovering around $4,000 an ounce, well below the record high of roughly $5,589 hit in January.
It is a serious correction: more than 25% below the peak. After months when gold only knew how to climb, the market remembered that nothing rises in a straight line.
What changed
Several forces pushed the same way. Expectations around interest rates shifted, with investors betting central banks may keep money expensive for longer to fight inflation. And when rates rise, gold, which pays no yield, loses shine against assets that do.
At the same time, any sign of geopolitical de-escalation pulls safe-haven demand. Gold lives on fear, and lately fear has swung with the talks between major powers.
Curiously, the big banks remain upbeat for year-end, with forecasts ranging from $4,900 to $6,300 an ounce. Nobody has called the cycle over, only cooled.
The lesson for the weekend investor is the usual one: gold is portfolio insurance, not a lottery ticket. Diversifying remains the most boring and most sensible advice.
See also: What is moving rates and Euribor and how term deposits started paying again. Data at Trading Economics.
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