Gold Eyes $6,000 as Middle East Risks Reignite
With gold already up 3% this month to $5,234, a potential 15% geopolitical risk premium could push the metal toward $6,000 - a level that seemed unthinkable just months ago.
How central bank policy, interest rates, inflation data and geopolitics are shaping precious metals markets.
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With gold already up 3% this month to $5,234, a potential 15% geopolitical risk premium could push the metal toward $6,000 - a level that seemed unthinkable just months ago.
U.S. tariff policy is emerging as the next major catalyst for gold, and at $5,201 per ounce, the market is already pricing in significant uncertainty.
Gold is pressing toward the top of its daily range at $5,230 as a potent combination of trade-war anxiety and Middle East diplomacy uncertainty drives fresh safe-haven inflows across the precious.
Goldman Sachs has raised its gold target to $5,400, yet with spot already trading above $5,100 and central bank buying showing no signs of slowing, the real question is whether even that forecast is.
Gold's relentless climb past $5,100 is being turbocharged by escalating trade war rhetoric, with the metal posting its strongest weekly gain in months as investors scramble for protection against.
Gold's relentless climb toward record territory is being turbocharged by escalating trade tensions, with the metal posting its strongest weekly gain in months as investors pile into safe-haven assets.
The East African Community's directive to coordinate gold reserve accumulation across its member central banks signals a broadening of the emerging-market gold buying trend that has helped push.
Gold has gained over 6% in a single month and now trades above $5,050, with macro forces aligning in a way that makes a $6,000 target look less like fantasy and more like trajectory.
Gold is consolidating above the $5,000 mark after a blistering weekly gain of over 4%, as traders position for escalating trade policy uncertainty under the latest round of Trump tariff maneuvers.
Gold's surge past $5,000 per ounce is being fuelled by a rare convergence of central bank buying, revived ETF inflows, and deepening fiscal concerns that suggest this bull run has further to go.
Gold steadies after Kevin Warsh's Fed nomination triggered a sharp sell-off, revealing how quickly hawkish policy expectations can rattle precious metals.