Showing posts with label drift from US dollar. Show all posts
Showing posts with label drift from US dollar. Show all posts

Wednesday, 17 December 2025

Gold March Toward US$5,000: A New Reality

Gold’s surge in 2025 — the strongest since the 1979 oil shock — would normally invite calls for a painful correction. Prices have doubled in two years. Yet this rally is not built on speculative froth alone. It is anchored in a structural shift that could carry bullion to US$5,000 an ounce by 2026.

Spot gold touched a record US$4,381 in October, crossing milestones once thought distant. The drivers are neither exotic nor temporary - persistent US fiscal deficits, an implicitly weak-dollar posture, geopolitical fractures from Ukraine to NATO’s eastern flank, and rising unease over the Federal Reserve’s independence. In such an environment, gold is not merely a hedge — it is a statement of mistrust in paper promises.

What distinguishes this cycle is the role of central banks. For five consecutive years, they have been diversifying away from dollar assets, stepping in when investor positioning becomes stretched and prices wobble. This behavior places a firm floor under gold, resetting its trading range far higher than in previous cycles.

JP Morgan estimates that while 350 tons of quarterly demand keeps prices stable, actual buying may average 585 tons per quarter in 2026 — a telling imbalance.

Investors are following suit. Gold allocations have risen to 2.8% of total assets, up from 1.5% before 2022 — elevated, but hardly extreme given the scale of global uncertainty.

Forecasts from Morgan Stanley, JP Morgan and Metals Focus converge on the same conclusion, US$5,000 gold is no longer sensational. It is increasingly plausible. The real question is not how high gold can go, but how fragile confidence in fiat currencies has become.