Gold rallied in early 2026, supported by
elevated safe-haven demand amid geopolitical uncertainty, persistent
official-sector buying such as on-going emerging market central banks’
purchases, and diversification demand from private investors. Debate around the
USD’s longer-run role in the portfolio also fuelled demand for hard-asset
hedges such as gold and silver. However, current structural bullish trend can
be affected by shifts in real yields, USD movement and risk sentiment. Gold
usually can be a good diversifier for stocks. Gold remains firm reflecting
growing demand for real assets as investors seek hedges for inflation and
macroeconomic uncertainty from geopolitical risks.
Buoyed
gold and other precious metals’ prices reflect inflation concerns. Silver and
other industrial metals (platinum, palladium, etc) surged benefiting from
safe-have demand amid geopolitical tensions, renewed inflation concerns after
higher-than-expected PPI, and continued structural industrial demand tied to
electrification.
The
geopolitical shock triggers a risk-off move across markets – equities sliding,
crude oil surging and reinforcing demand for commodities including gold as a
store of value. Disruption to energy supplies generally boosts demand for gold
as higher oil prices increase inflation expectation while containing real
yield. Gold price has risen more than 20% in the early 2026 resulting from
geopolitical risk, central bank purchases and a bet on Federal Reserve’s
easing.
Total
gold held by central banks globally is at $4 trillion in the beginning of 2026,
surpassing the holding of US Treasuries at $3.9 trillion. Investment banks broadly
agree on gold price to rise further reflecting structural shift in central banks’
behavior of diversifying away from USD. The gold price target ranges from $3,100
to $6,300, which reflects uncertainty over the pace of gold repatriation and
reserve diversification. This long-term bullishness on gold is due to the fact that
gold repatriation does not increase global supply but shifts distribution and accessibility
only. Uncertain geopolitical environment also encourages holding gold
domestically. Central banks’ brining gold home reduces reliance on dollar-based
channels – its clearing networks, custodians and settlement infrastructure and
hence, exposure to the US sanction risk.
This slow
but steady shift away from the USD as the dominant reserve asset is hard to
track and largely unpriced. Historically, when the dollar strengthened and real
interest rate rose, gold price fell, but this relationship has weakened since
2022 as central banks have become major buyers of gold, becoming a
price-insensitive source of demand as they are more concerned about geopolitics.
This shift helps to explain why much higher gold price is expected than what would
have seemed reasonable.
What drives gold prices?
It is important to understand what drives gold prices to invest wisely. The followings are what makes gold prices move:
US dollar strength: Gold price is denominated in USD. When the dollar weakens, gold becomes cheaper for foreign buyers so there will be higher demand for it driving the gold price up.
Interest rate & inflation: Gold has no interest payment. However, when the real interest rates (interest rate – inflation) are low or negative, gold becomes relatively more attractive as an alternative to other assets as a store of value. Although gold is considered as an inflation hedge, higher interest can affect demand for this non-yielding asset in a negative way.
Higher real rates and a stronger USD act as a headwind for gold investment.
Geopolitical & economic uncertainty: Gold is considered as a safe-haven asset. During times of crisis, investors flock to gold, pushing prices higher. However, when the crude oil prices gain due to geopolitical tensions, it increases the expectation of inflation and drives up both global interest rates and US dollar. As mentioned above, when the USD strengthens, USD-priced gold will be more expensive for other currency holders making gold less attractive to foreign buyers.
Central Bank’s purchase: When central banks especially China and India buy large amounts of gold, they create significant price-insensitive demand for it, supporting the prices. Geopolitical tensions continue to support the demand for gold. The persistence of global uncertainty underpins the strategic demand for gold especially by the central banks as investors seek more diversification in their portfolios.
How to Invest in Gold?
Instead of buying physical gold bars or coins, you can invest in gold by buying shares of gold exchange-traded-funds (ETFs), or trading gold futures and options through a brokerage account or indirectly invest in golds by buying gold mining stocks.
Gold ETFs: ETFs trade like stocks that hold gold bullion tracking the gold prices. It is easy to buy or sell without storage costs with high liquidity and low tracking errors. However, it incurs management fees without physical gold ownership.
Gold futures: This is a contact to buy or sell gold at a set price on a future date. However, as this position requires margins it is considered as a leveraged position. Also, as the contracts expire, they need to be rolled over.
Gold options: Gold option contracts give the right, not the obligation to trade gold futures. The contract has an expiration and it provides flexibility to speculate on gold prices with the risk only limited to the premium paid.
Gold mining stocks: Investors can invest in gold indirectly through the shares of companies engaged in gold mining. These stocks can provide dividends and sometimes outperform the gold. However, the price of gold mining stocks can be affected by company’s management and their operations.