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Gold’s $4,000 Fortress Holds as Central Bank Demand Clashes With Fed Policy Reset

Gold is caught between two opposing currents. Central banks are stockpiling the metal at a pace not seen in decades, yet the price sits roughly 27% below its January all-time high. The tension between structural buying and tactical selling has created a fragile equilibrium that the coming days could break.

The numbers tell a clear story on the buying side. Global central bank gold reserves have overtaken holdings of US Treasuries for the first time, with gold now accounting for about 27% of official foreign exchange reserves. A survey shows 89% of central banks expect that share to keep rising. China’s central bank bought 8.1 tonnes in April, its largest monthly purchase since December 2024. Poland added 31 tonnes in the first quarter, lifting its reserves to 582 tonnes. Overall, central bank demand surged 17% quarter over quarter.

Yet the price continues to bleed. Gold closed last week at $4,103, down 1.66% on the week and nearly 8% lower for the month. The year-to-date decline stands at about 5.5%. The culprit is the US Federal Reserve, which has forced a radical repricing of interest rate expectations.

Fed Hawks Push Rates Higher — and Gold Lower

Fed Chair Kevin Warsh has pushed back forcefully against any talk of early rate cuts. The May PCE reading came in at 4.1%, well above the Fed’s own 3.6% forecast, while core PCE hit 3.4%. The latest dot plot now signals a quarter-point hike in 2026 — reversing previous projections that implied cuts. Markets are currently pricing in three rate increases this year, with a 62% probability of the first in September.

Goldman Sachs reacted swiftly, slashing its year-end 2026 gold target by $500 to $4,900 per ounce. The bank now sees the first rate cuts arriving only in June and December 2027. This aligns with the broader shift: nine members of the Fed’s Open Market Committee are said to be considering further tightening. The US Dollar Index remains near the 100 level, amplifying headwinds for dollar-denominated gold.

Geopolitical safe-haven demand has also faded. The provisional peace deal between the US and Iran has reduced tensions in the Middle East, pushing oil prices back to pre-conflict levels. That has removed a short-term catalyst for gold, even though the structural arguments — inflation risk, dollar diversification, sanctions hedging — remain intact.

Technicals and the Week Ahead

On the charts, the $4,000 mark has held as short-term support. The 50-day moving average near $4,480 acts as the next upside resistance, while a break below $4,000 could expose the next floor around $3,700. The RSI sits at 37.3, deep in oversold territory, but not yet a clear buy signal. A rebound toward $4,550 would, according to some technicians, open a path for a renewed attack on the all-time high of $5,627.

Key catalysts lie ahead. The European Central Bank’s annual Sintra forum kicks off Monday, with central bankers expected to offer fresh guidance on policy. German state-level CPI data follows Tuesday, serving as an early indicator for eurozone inflation. But the biggest event is the US jobs report on July 2. Strong payroll numbers would reinforce the Fed’s hawkish stance and pressure gold further.

A Divide on the Street

Not all banks are retreating. JPMorgan’s Greg Shearer maintains a long-term forecast of $6,000 per ounce, even as he flags the most dangerous scenario for gold: a US economy that stays resilient while inflation reaccelerates, locking the Fed into a tightening cycle. That dynamic, he warns, would weigh on gold regardless of central bank buying.

Meanwhile, a bifurcation has emerged in physical markets. In Southeast Asia, local bullion prices have risen even as the global quote slipped, suggesting that demand on the ground is decoupling from financial flows. For now, the clock is ticking down to the jobs report — the next test of whether gold’s $4,000 floor can hold against the weight of the Fed.

Ripple’s European Expansion and DeFi Overhaul Provide Counterpoint to XRP’s Steep Decline

Ripple has secured a critical regulatory foothold in Europe just days ahead of a continent-wide enforcement deadline, even as XRP’s token price careens toward its lowest level in a year. The Luxembourg financial regulator CSSF granted the company a provisional CASP license on June 23, allowing Ripple to offer services across all 30 countries of the European Economic Area when the EU’s hard MiCA deadline hits on July 1. Combined with an existing e-money license, the approval lets Ripple deploy its XRP Ledger-based services and the RLUSD stablecoin throughout the bloc, positioning it as one of the most comprehensively regulated crypto operators in the region.

The timing of the expansion stands in stark contrast to XRP’s market performance. The token is trading at $1.04, within arm’s reach of its 52-week low and down more than 21% over the past month. Since the start of the year, XRP has shed over 44% of its value, and at current levels it sits more than 70% below the all-time high set last summer. The relative strength index has fallen to 30.9, deep into oversold territory, with forced liquidations and panic selling compounding the downward momentum.

Yet institutional appetite for XRP exposure has barely flickered. Spot ETFs attracted $22.99 million in net inflows during the final week of June alone, the strongest weekly figure of the month, pushing the monthly tally to $46.5 million. Since the first XRP ETFs launched in November 2025, cumulative net inflows have reached $1.43 billion. The funds now hold roughly $990 million in assets under management, with about 939 million XRP tokens locked inside them. The persistent buying from institutional players stands out against the backdrop of outflows from Bitcoin products and underscores a growing bifurcation between price action and capital flows.

The next major catalyst rests in Washington. The CLARITY Act, which would codify XRP and similar digital assets as commodities under U.S. law, cleared its most significant procedural hurdle in the Senate in early June. A final vote is now expected between July 13 and August 4. Standard Chartered has estimated that passage could unlock an additional $4 billion to $8 billion in ETF investments. The legislation follows March’s joint classification of XRP as a digital commodity by the SEC and CFTC, already a milestone that had lifted the regulatory cloud that hung over the token for years.

Meanwhile, Ripple is pressing ahead with infrastructure upgrades that could reshape how capital moves on the XRP Ledger. Developers are preparing a major DeFi enhancement that would introduce two new protocols for native lending through liquidity pools. Users would be able to deposit assets such as XRP into pools and earn yields, while borrowers gain access to fixed-rate loans settled entirely on the ledger — no external smart contracts required. Community voting signals broad support, and the upgrade would mark the first time the XRP Ledger offers direct peer-to-pool lending without third-party bridges.

The disconnect between Ripple’s corporate and technological advances and XRP’s price weakness has become one of the market’s more perplexing narratives. Stablecoin issuance and payment activity on the network continue to climb, pointing to real-world demand that the speculative token valuation is failing to capture. Whether the unfolding DeFi overhaul and the prospect of a CLARITY Act victory can reverse the slide remains uncertain, but for now, XRP is caught between a foundation that is strengthening and a market that is still capitulating.

Gold’s ETF Exodus Nears $8 Billion Even as Central Banks Stack Record Reserves

The tug-of-war between institutional investors fleeing gold-backed funds and central banks stockpiling bullion has never been more pronounced. The SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) shed over 13 tonnes of physical gold in mid-June alone, while year-to-date net outflows across the exchange-traded fund complex have swelled to $7.7 billion. Yet beneath that selling pressure, official-sector demand is running at its strongest in half a century—a divergence that leaves the metal caught between two vastly different forces.

The spot price closed Friday at $4,103.70 an ounce, clawing back 1.54% on the day but still nursing a weekly decline of 1.66%. That puts the benchmark roughly 27% below the record high struck in January, and the monthly drop stands at nearly 8%. The Relative Strength Index has fallen to 37.3, a level that traditionally signals oversold conditions, though not a guaranteed reversal.

Goldman Slashes Forecast as Fed Keeps Rates Elevated

The biggest headwind remains US monetary policy. Goldman Sachs cut its year-end 2026 gold target by $500, trimming the forecast from $5,400 to $4,900 an ounce. The revision reflects a dramatically changed rate outlook under Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh, who has categorically rejected calls from President Trump for immediate easing. Inflation accelerated to 4.1% in May, with the core reading at 3.4%, both stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% goal.

Nine members of the Federal Open Market Committee are now weighing additional rate increases this year, and the market has fully priced in three hikes. The probability of a first move in September sits at 62%, while Goldman Sachs expects the initial cut may not arrive until the second half of 2027—a stark shift from earlier expectations of late 2026.

JPMorgan has taken a markedly different stance. The bank maintains a year-end price target of $6,000, with a $6,300 projection for 2027, betting that structural demand from reserve managers will ultimately overwhelm the cyclical drag from higher US rates.

Central Bank Hoarding Reshapes the Market

That institutional buying is hard to ignore. Global central banks now hold more than 36,000 tonnes of gold—the largest stockpile since 1975. In the first quarter alone, they added a net 244 tonnes. Gold’s share of official foreign reserves has climbed to roughly 27%, surpassing US Treasuries at 22% for the first time in decades. Reserve managers are prioritising inflation protection and insulation from sanctions risk, a pivot that is proving remarkably price-inelastic.

The impact is visible beyond the headline price. In Southeast Asia, physical bullion prices have decoupled from the global benchmark, with local bar premiums rising even as the world market corrects. That physical disconnect suggests underlying demand from wealth-preservation buyers remains robust despite the bearish signals from paper markets.

Technical Test and the Jobs Report Catalyst

On the charts, gold has successfully defended the psychological $4,000 support level. Resistance lies in the $4,200–$4,400 zone, while a break lower could open the door to the next floor near $3,700. The immediate catalyst arrives July 2 with the US employment report. Strong payroll numbers would reinforce the Fed’s hawkish resolve and likely push gold back toward the $4,000 handle.

Geopolitics adds another layer of uncertainty. President Trump’s recent agreement with Iran knocked oil prices sharply lower, easing one source of inflationary pressure. But the Strait of Hormuz remains a latent flashpoint—any disruption there could reverse the disinflationary trend and drive capital back into safe havens. For now, the metal is balancing a technical oversold bounce against the gravitational pull of a tightening central bank, with central-bank hoarding providing a floor that may not hold if payrolls surprise to the upside.

Gold’s Divergent Fortunes: Rate Fears Hammer Paper Gold While Central Banks and New Asian Hub Prop Up Demand

Gold suffered its steepest monthly slide since last year, shedding 7.73% in June as hotter-than-expected US inflation data and hawkish signals from the Federal Reserve snuffed out hopes for near-term rate cuts. The yellow metal closed the week at $4,103.70 per ounce, leaving it 5.48% lower for 2026. Yet beneath the surface, a powerful counter-current is building: central banks are buying at a record clip, and Singapore is positioning itself as a new global hub for physical bullion.

The trigger for the latest sell-off was the May reading of the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge. The core PCE price index rose to 3.4% year-on-year, while the headline rate accelerated to 4.1% — the highest level since 2023. Fed Chair Kevin Warsh responded by lifting the central bank’s 2026 rate projections, and Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari went further, declaring that rate cuts are now off the table and another increase is approaching. Markets now assign a roughly 62-63% probability to a rate hike at the September meeting, a shift that has crushed gold’s appeal as a non-yielding asset.

But while paper gold suffers from the real-rate headwind, physical demand is surging. A World Gold Council survey of 76 central banks found that 45% plan to increase their reserves — a record share — and 89% expect global holdings to rise over the next twelve months. In the year to date, central banks have already purchased around 850 tonnes of gold. Goldman Sachs calculates that monthly buying is running three times higher than before 2022, when Western sanctions froze Russian assets and triggered a lasting diversification drive, especially among BRICS nations.

Structural shifts on the supply side are also reshaping the market. The Singapore Exchange will launch a new over-the-counter settlement system for physical gold called “Loco Singapore” before year-end, with JPMorgan and Deutsche Bank on board as clearing members. From October 2026, the Monetary Authority of Singapore will offer custody services for foreign central banks, turning the city-state into a round-the-clock bridge between European and American trading hours. At the same time, Ghana’s government will from July 1 require mining companies to sell one-third of their output directly to the state, a move that could tighten free-market availability just as demand from official institutions grows.

Chart watchers see a precarious floor just below current levels. The metal is clinging to the $4,000 zone after a “death cross” in June flashed a bearish signal. The first technical support lies at $3,820, with a break below the psychologically important $4,000 mark opening the door for a correction toward $3,600, according to market technicians. On the upside, the all-time high of $5,627 from earlier this year remains a distant memory, but the pattern of outflows from the world’s largest gold ETF — some 57 tonnes since January — has slowed in recent weeks, hinting that the worst of the paper- market exodus may be over.

All eyes now turn to the US nonfarm payrolls report due on July 2, which will either validate the Fed’s hawkish stance or offer some relief. For now, the sell-side remains firmly bullish on a 12-month horizon. Wells Fargo sees gold reaching $6,100-$6,300, J.P. Morgan and Bank of America target $6,000, UBS forecasts $5,500, Morgan Stanley $5,200, and even the most conservative call from Goldman Sachs at $4,900 implies significant upside from current levels. The question is whether the weight of central bank buying and new Asian infrastructure can outmuscle the looming threat of further Fed tightening.

XRP at a Crossroads: Security Green Light and a Japan Stablecoin Launch That Can’t Break the Slide

XRP is caught in a paradoxical moment. The token’s network cleared a critical audit hurdle this month and a sister stablecoin just went live at a major Japanese exchange — yet the price lingers near its worst levels of the year, down more than 44% since January.

At roughly $1.04, XRP is barely above the 52-week trough of $1.01 set on June 25. The relative strength index has drifted to 31, a zone that typically signals oversold conditions. Technical relief may be overdue, but neither the news flow from the XRP Ledger nor Ripple’s expanding Asian footprint has provided the catalyst markets appear to want.

Security Audit Closes Without Red Flags

The blockchain security firm Halborn has completed a fresh review of the XRPL Lending Protocol, a piece of infrastructure that could eventually bring native fixed-term lending to the ledger. The re-audit ran from mid-December 2025 through early January 2026. Ripple commissioned it after significant code changes since the initial audit in the summer of 2025.

The findings were benign: zero critical vulnerabilities and zero high-risk issues. Halborn’s report identified five items in total — one medium-severity flaw involving a potential bypass of a vault’s borrowing ceiling through accrued interest, which has since been fixed. The remainder were two low-priority bugs and two purely informational notes. Halborn confirmed that all reported issues were addressed.

This matters because the lending mechanism envisioned under the proposal known as XLS-66 would be structurally different from the overcollateralized lending typical of other decentralized finance networks. It relies on pooled assets in single-asset vaults with external underwriting. For a network best known as a payment rail, adding a DeFi layer could broaden its use case and, by extension, drive demand for XRP, which powers all transaction fees on the ledger.

But an audit is not an activation. Getting the protocol onto mainnet still requires validator approval — a separate governance process that has yet to conclude.

RLUSD Arrives in Japan — With Ethereum Strings Attached

Separately, Ripple’s stablecoin RLUSD is now tradable via SBI VC Trade, a regulated Japanese exchange. The product, fully backed by US Treasuries and cash reserves, holds roughly $1.7 billion in market capitalization and is classified as Japan’s first Type 4 stablecoin.

For XRP holders, the reception has been muted. The reason lies in the technical plumbing. SBI VC Trade currently supports RLUSD deposits and withdrawals only over the Ethereum network. Integration with the XRP Ledger — the network Ripple controls — has not yet been implemented. That means the stablecoin’s liquidity and utility are not flowing through XRP’s own ecosystem.

Trading is live 24/7 on SBI’s spot platform with no fees, though strict limits apply. The maximum order size and account balance are each capped at the equivalent of 10 million yen. Large transactions require additional processing time, particularly over weekends and holidays.

While the launch strengthens Ripple’s regulated infrastructure in Asia, the direct benefit to XRP remains contingent on a future XRPL bridge. Until then, the token exists alongside the stablecoin without sharing its network effects.

Technical Stability, Market Indifference

The XRP Ledger itself continues to operate smoothly. New blocks are finalized approximately every 3.8 seconds — a baseline that should support the consistency requirements of a credit protocol. Yet none of this operational health has translated into price action.

The disconnect illustrates a pattern familiar in digital asset markets: infrastructure milestones and regulatory progress often take time to filter through to valuations. The audit clears one barrier. The Japan listing expands distribution. But without validator consensus for native lending or a direct XRPL channel for RLUSD, the market is waiting on the next catalyst — not reflecting what has already arrived.