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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.

Silver’s Bearish Paradox: A 67-Million-Ounce Deficit Meets Its Match in a Hawkish Fed and a Solar Slowdown

Even as the Silver Institute forecasts a sixth consecutive supply shortfall in 2026 — with a deficit of 67 million ounces — the metal is being pummelled by forces that no production gap can offset. The price has lost more than 20% in recent weeks, tumbling below $57 on Thursday and extending the rout on Friday to a low of $55.60. A late-session recovery to just over $58 offered only a fleeting reprieve; the broader downtrend remains firmly entrenched.

The Federal Reserve is the primary culprit. Under new chairman Kevin Warsh, the central bank has doubled down on its hawkish stance, with Bank of America analysts now expecting three more rate hikes this year that would lift the federal funds rate by 75 basis points to 4.50%. The US dollar has responded by punching above 101 on the dollar index and hitting a one-year high, making silver more expensive for overseas buyers. With US inflation running at 4.2% in May, traders are bracing for another increase in September, further draining the appeal of a zero-yielding asset.

Geopolitical relief has stripped away another layer of support. The interim peace deal signed in mid-June between the US and Iran — the Islamabad Memorandum — has calmed tensions in the Strait of Hormuz, with shipping volumes nearly back to pre-crisis levels. The risk premium that had been baked into commodity markets is rapidly evaporating, prompting speculative funds to unwind their silver hedges.

On the industrial side, the picture is equally troubling. The solar power sector, a key driver of silver demand in recent years, is cutting back sharply. Photovoltaic manufacturers — stung by historically high procurement costs — are substituting alternative materials and reducing the silver content in their panels. The Silver Institute estimates that solar demand will drop 19% this year to 151 million ounces. Jewelry and silverware orders are also slumping, compounding the demand-side weakness.

A simultaneous sell-off in US technology stocks added to the pressure, forcing leveraged investors to liquidate silver positions to meet margin calls. The result is a market that has been drained of both safe-haven and speculative bids.

Technical indicators underscore the severity of the decline. The Relative Strength Index has dropped to 27.5, signalling an oversold condition by conventional measures, but chartists see little room for a sustained bounce. The price has already undercut the next support level at $54.56, and if that line fails to hold, further losses are likely. Resistance now sits in the $58 area, a zone that silver struggled to reclaim on Friday.

Longer-term bulls point to the structural deficit and the fact that global inventories have shrunk by more than 760 million ounces since 2021. But with the Fed remaining resolute, the dollar strong, and industrial demand — particularly from solar — on the wane, the bears have the upper hand for now. A meaningful turnaround will require either a shift in monetary policy or a fresh catalyst from the industrial side of the equation.

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.