Key facts
- Gold prices have reversed from record highs, falling 25% since January.
- Expectations of U.S. monetary tightening and a stronger dollar are pressuring gold prices.
- The metal reached a six-month low of $4,022 per troy ounce on Thursday.
- Gold has fallen below its 200-day moving average, a key technical level, for the first time in 2-1/2 years.
- Managed short positions on COMEX gold are at their lowest since January 2025.
- Gold-backed ETFs saw outflows in May and early June.
Gold prices have faltered from record highs due to expectations of U.S. monetary tightening and a stronger dollar, despite ongoing geopolitical risks and central bank buying. Spot gold reached $5,595 per ounce in January but has since fallen 25% to around $4,000, touching a six-month low of $4,022 on Thursday.
Analysts attribute the reversal to increased bets on Federal Reserve rate hikes, spurred by strong U.S. jobs data, which has pushed gold below its 200-day moving average for the first time in 2-1/2 years. This technical break suggests a shift in market dynamics, with the 200-day moving average now acting as resistance at $4,446.
While geopolitical risks like the Iran conflict and fiscal deficits continue to support a longer-term case for gold as a safe haven, these factors have been overshadowed by rate hike expectations in the short term. Managed short positions on COMEX gold are at their lowest since January 2025, indicating room for bearish sentiment to build.
Furthermore, gold-backed exchange-traded funds (ETFs) have experienced outflows, with at least 270 tons of gold currently in loss-making territory at prices below $4,250, a figure expected to rise to 298 tons if prices remain around $4,000. Physical demand is also seasonally sluggish. Analysts anticipate gold prices may trade in a range for the next few months before potential strategic catalysts emerge.