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Gold’s 28% Rout Accelerates as Hawkish Fed and Strong Dollar Silence Safe-Haven Demand

Gold extended its slide below $4,000 on Wednesday, marking a staggering 28% plunge from January’s all-time high of $5,627. The metal is now trading around $4,048, having briefly pierced the psychologically critical $4,000 barrier. The selloff has been driven by a potent cocktail of a surging dollar, hawkish repricing of Federal Reserve rate expectations, and a fading geopolitical risk premium.

The dollar index climbed to a 13-month high near 101.50, making bullion more expensive for non-dollar buyers. Simultaneously, bets on three Fed rate hikes in 2026 have replaced earlier expectations of just one, pushing two-year Treasury yields to 4.19%. Gold, which offers no yield, becomes less attractive in a rising real-rate environment. Robust US manufacturing data—the ISM index hit 55.7 in June—further underpinned the Fed’s tightening bias.

Geopolitical tensions have also eased. Reports of a stable ceasefire between Israel and Iran, coupled with increased shipping through the Strait of Hormuz, have diminished safe-haven demand. Since the onset of those tensions in February, gold has lost roughly 23% of its value—much of its earlier rally was a war premium that has now evaporated.

The technical picture has turned bleak. Gold is trading below its 200-day moving average of $4,446, and the relative strength index (RSI) has fallen to 31, near oversold territory. Analysts are warning of a potential “death cross,” where the 50-day moving average crosses below the 200-day—a classic bearish signal that could foreshadow further declines.

Banks are scrambling to adjust their forecasts. Deutsche Bank slashed its third-quarter 2026 gold price forecast by over 22% to $4,300, citing “Fed repricing together with robust US macro data.” Analyst Michael Hsueh warned that in a risk scenario of three to four rate hikes, gold could tumble to $3,800. His baseline assumes rates stay unchanged, but nine of 19 FOMC members signaled at least one more hike, and the probability of a December increase has surged above 89%. The German bank had as recently as April floated the possibility of $6,000 gold, underpinned by de-dollarization and central bank buying. Its new Q4 target is $4,800, down 17% from the previous estimate.

Goldman Sachs had already cut its year-end target by $500 to $4,900 last week, and BofA Global Research has revised its forecast to include a September rate hike. The current price of around $4,048 is now just 4% above the 52-week low of $3,901. If support at $4,000 fails, the next technical levels are $3,800 and potentially $3,500.

Yet not all buyers have fled. Central banks remain net purchasers, adding 244 tonnes in the first quarter of 2026—up 3% year-on-year. A World Gold Council survey found that 45% of central banks plan to increase their gold reserves this year. Chinese investment demand also persists, with premiums on the Shanghai Gold Exchange remaining elevated despite lower Western prices. This structural buying provides a floor, but it has so far been insufficient to counter the macro headwinds.

The key data point ahead is Thursday’s US PCE release—the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge. A hotter-than-expected reading would likely reinforce the hawkish narrative and push gold further toward the crucial $3,800 level. The market remains split between steadfast structural buyers and a powerful monetary policy headwind, and the outcome of that tug-of-war will depend on the dollar’s ability to hold above the 100 mark.

Gold’s Fed-Fueled Rout Deepens: Deutsche Bank Warns of $3,800 as Structural Bullion Buyers Hold the Line

The selloff in gold has accelerated to a point where one of Europe’s largest banks now sees a real risk of prices falling below $4,000. Deutsche Bank slashed its third-quarter 2026 forecast by more than 22% to $4,300 an ounce, marking the most severe prediction cut by a continental institution this year. Analyst Michael Hsueh warned that if the Federal Reserve delivers three or four rate increases, bullion could tumble to $3,800 — a scenario fewer than two months ago few would have entertained.

The metal hasn’t waited for the worst case to materialize. At $4,079.30 per troy ounce, gold has surrendered 1.17% in a single session and 4.63% over the past week alone. The January record of $5,626.80 now looks like a distant memory, with the current level representing a decline of roughly 27%. That slide has erased all of last year’s gains and pushed the year-to-date performance into negative territory — down about 4%.

The Fed holds the whip hand

The primary culprit, according to Hsueh and an increasing chorus of strategists, is the repricing of U.S. monetary policy. Although the Fed left rates unchanged at its June meeting, half of the Federal Open Market Committee members signaled that further tightening remains on the table. Nine of the committee’s 19 participants indicated at least one additional hike this year, and market pricing now puts the probability of a December move above 89%. That hawkish tilt has propelled the U.S. Dollar Index to its highest since May 2025, making gold more expensive for overseas buyers and sapping global demand.

Deutsche Bank is not alone in its retreat. Goldman Sachs trimmed its year-end target by $500 to $4,900 in the prior week, citing the same rationale: no rate cuts in 2026. BofA Global Research has also revised its outlook, now penciling in a rate increase for September. JPMorgan, however, remains an outlier, holding to its $6,000 year-end call even as it lowered its average forecast for the year to $5,243.

Geopolitical tailwind fades

Adding to the pressure, a diplomatic thaw has removed some of the safe-haven bid that had propped up gold earlier in the year. The memorandum of understanding signed between the United States and Iran lowered geopolitical risk premiums. Less geopolitical anxiety translates into less demand for traditional havens — and that has been another headwind for the yellow metal.

Behind the rout, structural support holds firm

Yet the long-term bull case is far from dead. Central banks bought 244 tonnes of gold net in the first quarter of 2026, a 3% year-over-year increase, and the World Gold Council reports that 45% of central banks plan to add to their reserves this year. In China, premiums on the Shanghai Gold Exchange remain elevated, signaling that Chinese investors continue to absorb physical bullion even as Western prices decline. European gold exchange-traded products actually recorded inflows of €779.5 million in the previous week, a rare bright spot against the backdrop of net outflows from global gold ETFs.

A mining bright spot amid the gloom

The operational front also offers some encouragement. Newcore Gold released a strong pre-feasibility study for its Enchi project in Ghana, calculating an after-tax net present value of $647 million at an assumed gold price of $4,200 an ounce. The internal rate of return stands at 45%, and the mine is expected to produce roughly 130,000 ounces annually during its first three years. The company intends to apply for a mining concession before the end of the year.

Technical warning lights flashing

On the charts, the picture remains precarious. The 50-day moving average is approaching the 200-day moving average from above, a configuration many technicians view as a bearish death cross. The relative strength index has dropped to 35.8, indicating oversold conditions — but oversold does not mean a rebound is imminent in the face of relentless Fed headwinds.

All eyes now turn to the PCE inflation report due June 25. A hotter-than-expected reading would embolden the hawks further and could send gold testing the $4,000 threshold. Deutsche Bank’s risk case of $3,800 would then move from theoretical to dangerously plausible. The tug-of-war between structural bullion buyers and the monetary policy cycle is entering its most critical phase.

Gold Nears $4,000 as Chinese Import Frenzy and Central Bank Support Fail to Counter Hawkish Fed Shift

The gold market is being torn in two directions. On one side stands the Federal Reserve under its new chairman Kevin Warsh, whose hawkish tilt has sent real yields soaring and the dollar surging. On the other, a historic buying spree from Chinese importers and global central banks that would normally underwrite a rally. For now, the Fed is winning.

Gold closed at $4,155.40 on Wednesday, roughly 26% below its January record of $5,627. The decline reflects a radical repricing of rate expectations. Warsh overhauled the Fed’s communication at his debut, scrapping forward guidance and slashing statements, while five new working groups took over analysis. Markets now see a 72% probability of a rate hike in September, with Deutsche Bank and Bank of America Global Research both penciling in a move this autumn.

The immediate catalyst is Thursday’s PCE price index, the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge. Economists forecast the core rate will edge up to 0.3% from 0.2%. A higher reading would reinforce the tightening narrative, potentially pushing gold through the psychological $4,000 floor. Rising real yields and a strong dollar have already rendered the zero-yielding metal unattractive compared with bonds.

The dollar’s strength is punishing non-U.S. buyers. The euro slipped to $1.1383, its lowest since June 2025, making dollar-denominated bullion more expensive for European and Asian investors. The relative strength index for gold stands at 35, signaling an oversold market, yet no bounce has materialized.

Exchange-traded fund investors have been net sellers, with the flagship GLD fund losing about half a tonne of holdings in a single week. Year-to-date outflows total $8.3 billion, though the pace of selling is slowing – a tentative sign that the worst may be over.

Offsetting those flows is enormous physical demand, particularly from Asia. Chinese gold imports reached 163 tonnes in May, the highest since March 2024, bringing the five-month total to 692 tonnes – a 76% jump from the same period last year. Analysts at the Guangzhou Southern Gold Market Academy attribute the surge to strong appetite for physical bars and the success of gold savings plans. A new licensing system that took effect on June 1 is easing market access for certain Chinese banks, helping stabilize supply.

Global central banks added a net 244 tonnes to their reserves in the first quarter. A survey by the World Gold Council found that 45% of central banks plan to increase their gold holdings over the next year, and 83% expect to hold more within five years. These official-sector purchases act as a long-term anchor, even as short-term speculative flows retreat.

Major investment banks remain bullish on a 12-month view, though Goldman Sachs trimmed its year-end 2026 target from $5,400 to $4,900. Morgan Stanley targets $5,200 and UBS $5,500. Bank of America and J.P. Morgan both see gold around $6,000 by the fourth quarter, while Wells Fargo forecasts $6,100 to $6,300 – provided de-dollarization continues.

For now, however, the market is dominated by the dual headwinds of a strong dollar and elevated rates. An additional drag: the Iran war premium, which had pushed prices sharply higher after February 28, is fading as diplomatic progress takes hold. Investors are cashing out as geopolitical tension eases.

If Thursday’s PCE report comes in hot, a direct test of $4,000 looks increasingly probable. The tug-of-war between Asian buying and Fed tightening will ultimately be settled by the Fed’s next policy moves this autumn.

Whales Buy the Dip as Cardano’s Leios Testnet Nears and Price Plumbs Five-Year Low

Cardano’s native token ADA touched $0.16 on Tuesday, its weakest level in half a decade, even as some of the network’s largest holders ramped up their positions. The price now sits roughly 84% below the 52-week peak of $1.01 reached in August 2025, a reminder of the brutal drawdown that has wiped out more than 55% of the asset’s value since the start of the year.

Yet on-chain data tells a different story for the biggest players. Whales have accumulated roughly 370 million ADA tokens since mid-June, according to transaction records, providing a floor near the 52-week low of $0.15. Mid-sized wallets, by contrast, have been steadily reducing their exposure. The divergence points to a market split between retail despair and institutional conviction.

A Double Header of Network Upgrades

The price slide comes at an awkward moment for the development team. On June 23, Input Output Global is set to launch the public testnet for Ouroboros Leios, dubbed “Musashi Dojo.” The protocol extension aims to boost Cardano’s throughput from around 10 transactions per second to more than 1,000, using larger endorser blocks to handle traffic spikes. The testnet will roll out through five phases — protocol validation, network optimization, practical testing, security audits, and final preparations for mainnet — with data throughput increasing gradually from 4.5 KB/s to 200 KB/s. A production launch is not expected until late 2026 or early 2027.

A second milestone follows almost immediately. Voting is underway for the “van Rossem” hard fork, which would upgrade the network to protocol version 11 and accelerate smart contract execution. Already 89% of block production runs on compatible software, and the final activation is penciled in for June 28.

Institutional Doors Swing Open

While retail sentiment sours, traditional finance is taking notice. The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission has approved the T. Rowe Price Active Crypto ETF, an actively managed fund that allocates 3.37% of its portfolio to Cardano — a meaningful stamp of approval for an asset that has long battled skepticism from mainstream investors.

Parallel to that, the Cardano Foundation has signed a three-year partnership with the Brazilian Olympic Committee. The blockchain will be used to secure digital identities for athletes, marking a real-world use case beyond the speculative grind.

Markets Flash Oversold Signals

The bearish picture is hard to ignore. ADA has lost more than 34% over the past 30 days alone. Daily trading volume has collapsed from a prior peak of $6.3 billion to roughly $500 million. The total value locked across Cardano’s DeFi ecosystem has fallen below $90 million, and CME futures volume plunged 87% in three days. The relative strength index hovers near 30, deep in oversold territory. The next support levels sit at $0.15 and, below that, $0.14.

AI Agents Stir Controversy

Founder Charles Hoskinson has also had to manage a community backlash over the use of AI-generated influencer content on social media. He defended the experiments as demonstrations for “Midnight City,” an interactive simulation of autonomous AI agents running on the Midnight Network. Midnight, which launched its mainnet on March 31, relies on zero-knowledge cryptography for privacy-focused applications and uses two native tokens: NIGHT for governance and DUST for transaction fees. Hoskinson has championed the open-source “OpenClaw” platform for autonomous agents and acknowledged that AI-generated content, including voice cloning, will soon be indistinguishable from human output. The goal, he insisted, is augmentation, not replacement.

Governance Hits a Speed Bump

The decentralization ethos that Cardano prides itself on also tripped up one planned event. The network’s community voted down funding for the Cardano Summit 2026, failing to reach the required two-thirds majority. The decision underscores the tight budget discipline imposed by the project’s on-chain treasury mechanism — and leaves a notable gap in the ecosystem’s calendar.

What’s Next

The coming days will test whether technical progress can shift the narrative. If the Leios testnet runs smoothly and the van Rossem hard fork activates as scheduled on June 28, the whale accumulation could prove prescient. Any stumbles, however, risk adding to the selling pressure in a market already flashing deep oversold readings. Early feedback from the “Earth” phase of the testnet is expected within weeks, giving the community its first real gauge of the upgrade’s performance under stress.

Silver’s Physical Squeeze Intensifies as Geneva Hopes Flicker and Fed Hawks Tighten Their Grip

Silver’s spot price clawed back to $66.42 an ounce on Monday, gaining 1.31% after a brutal 46% slide from the January 2026 record near $121. The rebound came not from any shift in the underlying supply-demand balance, but from a diplomatic breakthrough in Geneva that briefly loosened the market’s most punishing headwind: the energy-inflation feedback loop.

Underneath the daily price noise, however, the metal’s structural story is moving in the opposite direction. The global silver market is heading for its sixth consecutive annual deficit in 2026, with the shortfall now projected at 46.3 million ounces. Mine output continues to shrink — silver is overwhelmingly produced as a byproduct of other metals, making supply unresponsive to higher prices — while industrial demand, though shifting in composition, remains robust.

Solar Thrift Puts a Dent in Industrial Demand — But Not Enough

The most notable shift is in the solar sector. Chinese manufacturers have cut their silver consumption by roughly 19% this year to about 151 million ounces, substituting copper or moving to silver-free module designs. That has removed a significant chunk of demand from the market. Yet other industries are filling the gap. Artificial intelligence data centers, electric vehicle electronics and broader automotive applications are soaking up more silver than expected at the start of the year. India’s physical investment demand jumped 33% in 2025. The net effect is a slower but still widening deficit — supply is contracting faster than demand is faltering.

Geneva Breakthrough, Then Breakdown

Monday’s bounce followed news that the US and Iran had agreed on a 60-day roadmap toward a comprehensive peace accord after direct talks in Geneva, mediated by Qatar and Pakistan. Brent crude fell roughly 2% on the announcement. That matters for silver because high oil prices had been feeding directly into US inflation: energy accounted for more than 60% of the April consumer price index reading of 4.2%. Lower energy costs would relieve that pressure and, crucially, reduce expectations for further Federal Reserve rate hikes.

But the respite may prove short-lived. The same diplomatic channel has since hit a roadblock: the next round of US-Iran talks was cancelled, with Switzerland reporting that planned discussions would not take place. Traders now expect energy flows through the Strait of Hormuz to take months to return to pre-conflict levels. That uncertainty keeps the inflation-risk premium alive and the Fed’s hawkish bias intact.

The Fed’s Iron Grip

The central bank’s June meeting delivered exactly the kind of hawkish surprise that silver markets dread. Under Chairman Kevin Warsh, the Federal Open Market Committee held rates steady but stripped out dovish language and raised its dot-plot projections. Nine of the 19 policymakers now see at least one rate hike still this year, and markets assign a roughly 70% probability to a move by September. In the week of the FOMC decision alone, silver tumbled from $69.85 to $64 — a drop of nearly 8%.

Higher interest rates strengthen the dollar and push bond yields up, making non-yielding assets like silver less attractive. The gold-silver ratio, which stood at 55:1 in May, has surged to roughly 64:1 after the Fed’s hawkish June 16–17 meeting. Silver has lost more than 40% of its value since the start of the Iran conflict — not because geopolitical risk has faded, but because the conflict has shifted inflation expectations and, by extension, monetary policy expectations.

PCE Data as the Next Catalyst

All eyes now turn to the US personal consumption expenditures price index, due this week and the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge. If falling oil prices — aided by a sustained de-escalation in the Middle East — pull the energy component lower, the 89% probability the market currently assigns to a December rate hike could evaporate. That would be the catalyst silver bulls have been waiting for.

The range of institutional forecasts for end-2026 underscores how polarized the outlook has become. TD Securities sees silver at $44 an ounce. JP Morgan projects an annual average of $81, the Commerzbank at $90. One bullish participant in the LBMA survey calls for above $165, while a Reuters poll puts the consensus near $79.50.

A Market Torn Between Two Forces

Silver’s near-term trajectory will be determined by which force wins out: the hawkish Fed and the fragile geopolitics that keep energy prices elevated, or the deepening physical deficit and the potential for lower inflation to force the central bank to pause. Should the Iran situation truly de-escalate and energy costs continue to fall, the rate-hike narrative collapses. At that point, the fundamental case — six years of supply deficits, growing industrial demand beyond solar, and a gold-silver ratio near 64 — would quickly reassert itself, giving silver room to rally back toward the $80 level.