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Gold’s $4,000 Tug-of-War: Central Banks Pile Up Record Tonnes as Fed Hawks Force Steepest Quarterly Drop

Gold is caught in a violent crosscurrent. Central banks just snapped up a record 1,231 tonnes in the first quarter — the highest Q1 haul on record — yet the metal has shed 10% over the past month and briefly pierced $4,000 an ounce, touching a low of $3,984 on July 1 that marks its weakest level in nearly eight months.

The explanation lies in the divergent forces driving the market. Institutional buyers from Beijing to global monetary authorities are stockpiling bullion at an unprecedented clip. China alone added 8 tonnes in April, extending its buying streak to 18 consecutive months, and net imports surged to 317 tonnes in the first quarter — nearly triple the prior quarter’s figure. Worldwide, official sector purchases reached 244 tonnes in Q1, up from 208 tonnes in the previous three months.

But these massive flows are being swamped by a macroeconomic headwind: the Federal Reserve’s hawkish pivot. Strong US economic data have crushed hopes of rate cuts in 2026. The JOLTS report on June 30 showed a steady 7.6 million job openings in May, while core inflation remains stubbornly above the Fed’s 2% target. Markets now price a 30% chance of a rate hike at the next FOMC meeting and a probability above 60% for September, according to the CME FedWatch tool. Rising bond yields are making interest-bearing assets more attractive, draining the shine from gold.

The Fed’s new leadership is amplifying the uncertainty. Chairman Kevin Warsh, installed in June, created five independent task forces to rethink the central bank’s communication strategy, balance sheet management, data governance, inflation framework, and labor market assessment. The Fed currently holds $6.7 trillion in bonds, and any overhaul of its balance-sheet normalization is likely to ripple through markets. The June dot plot reinforced the hawkish tilt: nine of 18 participants expect a rate increase this year, and the median forecast for end-2026 edged up to 3.8%. Nearly all officials see rates holding steady or rising through 2026.

Analysts are scrambling to lower their sights. Citi slashed its short-term target from $4,300 to $4,000, citing a strong dollar and waning physical demand. Deutsche Bank trimmed its current-quarter forecast to $4,300 and also cut its year-end projection. Goldman Sachs, meanwhile, reduced its year-end 2026 target from $5,400 to $4,900, explicitly citing the absence of Fed easing. Technically, J.P. Morgan notes that gold is drifting above its 200-day moving average near $4,340 but capped below the 50-day at $4,730 — a textbook sign of a market under pressure.

Geopolitical developments add another layer of bearish risk. US-Iran talks are under way in Qatar, with no direct negotiations expected. Any tangible progress could further deflate the risk premium that has supported gold since the Middle East crisis erupted in late February. That crisis, combined with surging energy prices, first triggered the selling wave that has now accelerated into a full-blown rout.

The immediate trigger for the latest leg lower came from the labor market. The upcoming Nonfarm Payrolls report, released on Thursday this week due to the Independence Day holiday, will be the next flashpoint. Estimates vary — one survey of economists points to 115,000 new jobs, another to 110,000 — but the consensus is clear: a strong print would seal expectations for a rate hike and likely push gold decisively below $4,000. The unemployment rate is expected to hold at 4.3%.

Compounding the selling pressure is a structural shift in market expectations. Futures markets are now pricing in at least one rate increase for this year, a dramatic reversal from the easing bets that had supported gold earlier. The ADP employment report and the ISM manufacturing index, both due in the coming days, will provide further clues. For now, gold remains trapped between record central bank demand and the most aggressive monetary tightening narrative in months — a tension that shows no sign of resolution.

Silver’s Technical Bounce Masks a Trio of Structural Headwinds

A bullish crossover on the relative strength index briefly hauled silver back above $59 on Tuesday, offering a reprieve after a brutal June that saw the metal shed roughly 22% in a single month. But the rebound to $59.18 — a 0.72% gain — is testing traders’ conviction, with the exponential 20-day moving average lurking at $64.57 as a formidable ceiling. Below that level, the broader downtrend remains firmly intact.

The technical picture is extreme but fragile. The RSI has sunk to near 30, a classic oversold threshold that often lures short-term buyers. A first line of support sits at $56.60; a break below that opens the door to $54.86. Yet the same oversold signals that triggered this week’s bounce have provided little more than a reprieve in the past, and the macro headwinds that drove silver lower are far from dissipating.

At the macro level, Federal Reserve Chair Kevin Warsh continues to hold a hawkish line, reiterating the central bank’s commitment to its 2% inflation target despite current inflation running at 4.1%. Markets now price in a roughly 65% probability of another rate hike at the September 2026 meeting. A rising dollar — bolstered by that tightening outlook — weighs heavily on unyielding commodities like silver, making them more expensive for international buyers. Gold, too, suffered a similar fate, sliding about 11% over the same June period.

Geopolitical tailwinds that once propped up safe-haven demand have also faded. Diplomatic talks between the US and Iran in Doha, culminating in the so-called Islamabad Memorandum of Understanding, have eased tensions in the Strait of Hormuz. Investors have begun unwinding hedge positions in silver, removing a key source of price support that had been in place earlier in the year.

Meanwhile, the demand landscape is undergoing a tectonic shift. The solar industry, historically silver’s fastest-growing consumer, is expected to reduce its offtake by 19% in 2026 to around 151 million ounces, as module makers adopt more efficient pastes and substitute copper. That lost consumption is only partially offset by surging demand from the AI infrastructure sector, where silver’s thermal and electrical conductivity makes it indispensable in data centres and high-performance semiconductor manufacturing. That segment is growing at roughly 25% per year.

Compounding the near-term weakness is a marked slowdown in Chinese industrial buying. Data from the Shanghai Metals Market show spot transactions have dried up as processors hold back, waiting for clarity from US labour market releases. The resulting illiquidity has exacerbated the price slide.

Despite the rout, the physical supply narrative remains stretched. The Silver Institute projects a 46.3-million-ounce global deficit for 2026 — the sixth consecutive shortfall. Roughly three-quarters of the world’s silver is produced as a byproduct of copper, lead and zinc mining, limiting the ability of miners to respond quickly to price signals. COMEX warehouse inventories have been shrinking steadily since 2021. That structural deficit provides a floor, but for now, interest rate policy, a strong dollar and a fading geopolitical premium have seized the driver’s seat.

XRP Network Activity Jumps 72% as Whales Accumulate, but Price Tests Dollar Support

XRP’s market performance and its underlying network activity have diverged sharply in recent weeks. The token has shed roughly 71% from its July 2025 peak and currently trades near $1.03–$1.05, dangerously close to its 52-week low of $1.01. Year‑to‑date the decline stands at around 44%. Yet beneath the surface, wallets are multiplying, large holders are accumulating, and the ecosystem is preparing for institutional lending.

Daily active addresses on the XRP Ledger surged 72% to 39,500, driven by a wave of new wallet creations. Whales are taking advantage of the depressed price to move tokens off exchanges. Exchange outflows recently spiked to 123 million XRP, and Binance’s reserves hit a four‑month low. Meanwhile, the number of whale addresses holding at least one million XRP reached an all‑time high, and these large wallets now control roughly 74% of the total circulating supply. In a separate move, an additional outflow of 25 million XRP was recorded, underscoring the breadth of accumulation.

Institutional appetite is also visible in the ETF space. XRP spot exchange‑traded products attracted fresh capital for the eighth consecutive week, pulling in a total of nearly $145 million over that period. Assets under management in these products are approaching the $1 billion mark. Retail traders, by contrast, have largely retreated: open interest collapsed from $1.3 billion to under $150 million, and the Relative Strength Index has fallen to 30.5–32.2, firmly in oversold territory.

On the technology front, Ripple is pushing forward with a lending protocol that would run directly on the XRP Ledger’s consensus layer, eliminating the need for external smart contracts. The proposals, designated XLS‑65 and XLS‑66, would enable fixed‑term loans with pre‑determined interest rates. Credit vetting remains off‑chain; only settlement of funds occurs on the blockchain. The model targets institutional players dealing in government bonds or stablecoins, aiming to replace costly bank loans with efficient blockchain solutions. Currently 34 validators are voting, and an 80% approval threshold must be maintained for two consecutive weeks before the upgrade takes effect.

The ecosystem is also gaining traction through stablecoins and real‑world integrations. Ripple’s native stablecoin RLUSD now accounts for about 12% of all trading activity on the XRP Ledger, with more than half of RLUSD tokens minted directly on the network. Separately, Australian broker Caleb & Brown — which manages over $2 billion in assets — has integrated Ripple Payments, slashing fiat withdrawal times by bypassing traditional bank delays. On the security side, a proposal aims to curb front‑running on the decentralised exchange by requiring users to pay a fee for guaranteed transaction ordering.

Regulatory milestones are adding urgency. Ripple secured a provisional license in Luxembourg to prepare for the European Union’s MiCA framework. The transition period for crypto‑asset service providers under MiCA ends on 1 July 2026. So far, 244 companies have obtained a license under the regulation, with Germany leading at 57 approvals. Firms without a license after the deadline will be forced to cease operations in the European Economic Area, fundamentally reshaping the competitive landscape for digital assets.

While XRP’s price remains under pressure — the RSI signals deep oversold conditions and retail interest has evaporated — the simultaneous build‑up in network activity, whale holdings, and institutional infrastructure suggests a market that may be laying the groundwork for a reversal once sentiment turns.

Gold’s Split Personality: Central Bank Hoarding at Record Levels Even as Macro Headwinds Pressure Prices

Bullion is trapped between two powerful forces. On one side, monetary authorities around the world are stockpiling gold at a pace that has already reshaped the global reserve landscape. On the other, a hawkish Federal Reserve and fading safe-haven demand are driving the metal to its worst monthly performance in years.

Spot gold slipped to $4,046 an ounce on Monday, down roughly 1.4% from Friday’s close. The yellow metal has now declined for four straight months, shedding more than 11% in May alone. Its relative strength index sits at 34.7 — firmly in oversold territory. Yet even as the spot market languishes, central banks are sending a very different signal.

A Record Appetite for Physical Gold

In the first quarter, central banks worldwide added 244 tonnes of gold to their reserves, a 17% increase from the previous quarter. Poland and Uzbekistan led the buying spree. Goldman Sachs expects the pace to continue at roughly 60 tonnes per month for the rest of the year. That would build on the extraordinary average of 1,000 tonnes annually over the past four years — double the rate of the prior decade.

The World Gold Council’s 2026 central bank survey reveals the depth of this shift: 89% of reserve managers anticipate an increase in global gold holdings over the next twelve months, and a record 45% plan to actively expand their own reserves. Remarkably, gold has now surpassed US Treasuries as the largest reserve asset worldwide — a historic inflection point.

Private investors are also piling in. Global demand for coins and bars hit 474 tonnes in the first quarter, the second-highest quarterly total ever recorded.

Why the Dollar Is Losing Its Luster

The driving force behind this accumulation is a profound loss of confidence in the US dollar. According to the same survey, 61% of central banks now view US government debt as a threat to the dollar’s status — up from just 20% in 2024. A full 74% expect the dollar’s share of global reserves to decline over the next five years, with gold seen as the prime beneficiary. Remarkably, the euro and renminbi are barely mentioned as alternatives.

Central banks in emerging markets are using gold as a geopolitical buffer. And a new trend in storage is emerging: 9% of institutions expanded domestic gold vaulting last year, compared to 5% the year before.

The Fed Clouds the Near-Term Picture

Despite this structural demand, the immediate outlook for gold is clouded by monetary policy. The Fed has sharply revised its inflation forecast for this year to 3.6%, up from 2.7% previously. Markets are now pricing in three rate hikes in 2026, with a first move in September carrying a 60%-62% probability depending on the pricing model. Higher interest rates raise the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion, and the latest PCE inflation data did little to change the calculus.

The price has felt the weight. On a year-over-year basis, gold still shows a healthy 23% gain, but the rally to an all-time high of $5,626.80 feels distant. The metal traded around $4,067 on Monday according to some quotes, reflecting intraday volatility.

Geopolitics: A Double-Edged Sword

The latest leg of the sell-off was triggered by an escalation in the Persian Gulf. Iran attacked a container ship, a Qatari oil tanker, and military bases in Kuwait and Bahrain; the US responded with counterstrikes. Oil prices spiked, but gold actually declined as investors focused on the likely inflationary consequences — and the Fed’s likely response.

A ceasefire has since taken hold, and peace talks are expected to begin this week in Doha. Trump confirmed discussions would take place in Qatar on June 30. The temporary de-escalation removed a key safe-haven prop for gold, adding to the downward pressure.

ETF Flows Hold the Key to a Recovery

Analysts are watching ETF demand as the critical swing factor for the near term. Global gold ETF holdings fell to 4,121 tonnes in May, with assets under management dropping 2% month-on-month. Morgan Stanley has tied its $5,200 price target for the second half of 2026 directly to a rebound in ETF inflows. Goldman Sachs and Deutsche Bank have already trimmed their forecasts, citing the Fed’s restrictive stance.

Longer-term, the bull case remains robust. J.P. Morgan sees gold reaching $6,000 by year-end 2026 and $6,300 in 2027. But for that to happen, macro headwinds must ease. The next data points on the radar are the US jobs report and the ISM manufacturing index, which will shape expectations for the September rate decision.

For now, gold is caught between a historic physical buying spree and a monetary tightening cycle that shows no sign of relenting.

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.