Gold loses its 2026 shine — and the Fed is to blame
With Kevin Warsh at the helm and US rates climbing, gold slid to $4,113. What that says to anyone with cash sitting idle.
Gold spent months as the darling of anyone fleeing uncertainty. This week it got a cold shower: it slid to around $4,113 an ounce, wiping out much of its 2026 gains (though it’s still about $753 higher than a year ago).
The culprit has a name: the US Federal Reserve, now led by Kevin Warsh. With American inflation stubbornly at 4.2% and the central bank signalling higher rates, “safe and yielding” cash becomes attractive again — and gold, which pays no interest, loses its charm.
And for us here?
When US rates rise, the dollar tends to strengthen and markets get jittery. For anyone with savings, the same old lesson applies: don’t put all your eggs in one basket, distrust anyone promising guaranteed gains, and remember that what shoots up fast can come down just as fast. Gold hasn’t stopped being gold — it just fell out of fashion this week.
Illustrative · Photo: Michael Steinberg / Pexels