Gold loses its shine: far from January's record as Iran tensions ease
After hitting all-time highs early in the year, gold has pulled back sharply. What changed — and what investors are saying.
Anyone who bought gold early in the year thinking it would rise forever got a quick lesson in how markets work: nothing goes up in a straight line. The metal that looked unstoppable in January has lost much of its sparkle and is now keeping a far lower profile.
On 28 January, gold touched an all-time high near 5,600 dollars an ounce, driven by a perfect storm: geopolitical uncertainty, high inflation and central banks buying like never before. Five months on, it’s a different story. This week gold trades around 4,090 dollars, a drop of nearly 20% from the peak and about 5% so far this year.
What cooled the enthusiasm
The short explanation fits in one word: peace. Signs of de-escalation between the United States and Iran took away some of the fear that had sent so many people sheltering in gold. When the world breathes easier, the so-called safe-haven asset loses appeal, because investors go back to taking risks elsewhere in search of higher returns.
That doesn’t mean gold has stopped being interesting. For many portfolios it remains an insurance policy against surprises — and it only takes a few weeks of nerves for the shine to come back. The lesson, once again, is the usual one: gold protects, but it’s not a lottery ticket.
Reference prices can be tracked at the World Gold Council, the sector’s official body.
See also: Oil eases and gives wallets a breather and inflation stuck at 3.3%.
Illustrative · Photo: Zlaťáky.cz / Pexels