SMM June 20 news: Metals markets: Overnight, the domestic base metals market was closed for the Dragon Boat Festival holiday. Looking back at the performance of domestic base metals on June 18: Domestic base metals showed mixed performance, with SHFE zinc up 0.39%, SHFE aluminum up 0.38%, and SHFE nickel edging up. SHFE tin fell 2.03%, SHFE copper fell 0.48%, and SHFE lead fell 0.15%. Overnight, the ferrous metals market was closed for the Dragon Boat Festival holiday. Looking back at the performance of ferrous metals on June 18: Stainless steel rose 0.07%, iron ore fell 1.13%, rebar fell 0.95%. HRC fell 0.77%. The most-traded coking coal contract fell 5.78%, and the most-traded coke contract fell 3%. Overnight in overseas metals, LME base metals mostly fell. LME copper fell 0.5%. LME aluminum rose 0.12%, LME lead fell 1.32%. LME zinc fell 2.05%. LME tin rose 0.19%. LME nickel fell 1.41%. Overnight in precious metals : COMEX gold fell 1.72%, posting its third straight weekly decline and down 1.55% for the week; COMEX silver fell 2.12%, marking six consecutive weekly declines and down 4.51% for the week. Overnight, the most-traded SHFE gold contract was closed; SHFE gold rose on the week, up 4.11% for the week. The most-traded SHFE silver contract was closed; SHFE silver rose on the week, up 5.25% for the week. With no longer expecting the Fed to cut interest rates in 2026, Goldman Sachs lowered its year-end gold price forecast by $500. Analysts Lina Thomas and Daan Struyven said in a note: "We are revising down our 12-month gold price target to $4,900/oz (from $5,400), implying that gold prices are still expected to rise in H2, but less than previously anticipated. Our view on gold prices remains structurally constructive but tactically cautious, with near-term downside risks and medium-term upside risks." The analysts said the downward revision was due to Goldman Sachs economists pushing back their US rate cut expectations to June and December next year, from the previous forecast of December 2026 and March 2027, as well as lower projected gold ETF inflows. They added that, given the "unexpectedly hawkish" first Fed meeting under Chairman Warsh, concerns about central bank independence may be limited. (Jin10 Data) As of 7:47 am on June 20, overnight closing prices: Macro front Domestic front: [NFRA: Advance the construction of AI application infrastructure in the financial industry] The National Financial Regulatory Administration (NFRA) issued guidelines on the safe development and application of artificial intelligence in banking and insurance. It proposes to promote the construction of an AI application ecosystem in the financial sector. Advance the development of AI application infrastructure in the financial industry and promote the sharing and reuse of AI application outcomes across the sector. Encourage large financial institutions to play an exemplary role and export AI technologies and management experience to small and medium-sized financial institutions. Support small and medium-sized financial institutions in strengthening collaboration to jointly drive the implementation of application scenarios. Encourage closer synergy with the AI industry, using financial applications to foster industrial innovation and development, and leveraging industrial achievements to improve the quality and efficiency of financial applications. [Box office on the first day of the 2026 Dragon Boat Festival holiday surpasses 100 million yuan, number of new releases hits a near-decade high for the same period] According to data from online platforms, as of now, the box office (including pre-sales) on the first day of the 2026 Dragon Boat Festival holiday has exceeded 100 million yuan. The film offerings during the 2026 Dragon Boat Festival are diverse and rich in genre. Over the short three-day holiday, nearly 20 films were released in concentrated fashion, setting a new high for the same period in nearly a decade. The film genres cover sci-fi, youth, animation, and more, addressing the viewing needs of audiences across almost all age groups. (CCTV News) [Guangdong: Accelerate the construction of the national integrated computing power network hub in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area and make forward-looking plans for 6G technology and satellite internet] The General Office of the People's Government of Guangdong Province issued a notice on the Implementation Plan for Promoting the Expansion and Quality Improvement of the Service Sector in Guangdong Province. It mentions that the deployment of 5G-A networks and pilot projects for 10G optical networks will be advanced in an orderly manner. 50G-PON ports will be deployed on a large scale in key scenarios such as factories and industrial parks. The upgrading and renovation of aging communication facilities will be further promoted, with FTTR whole-home optical network coverage to be achieved simultaneously in both new and older residential communities. Mobile network coverage along major transportation routes and hubs will be improved, and initiatives to increase broadband speeds and benefit the public will be implemented, driving an overall leap in broadband user download rates. The construction of the national integrated computing power network hub in the Guangdong-Hong Kong-Macao Greater Bay Area will be accelerated, the spatial layout of data centers optimized, edge computing vigorously developed, and a “cloud-edge-device” collaborative computing power service system created. Forward-looking plans will be made for 6G technology and satellite internet, a Guangdong 6G Industry Innovation and Development Alliance will be established, and ministerial-provincial 6G collaborative pilot projects will be promoted, with a focus on creating application benchmarks for distinctive scenarios such as embodied AI, intelligent connected vehicles, the low-altitude economy, and the marine economy. [Guangdong: Support the Guangzhou Futures Exchange in enriching its futures product system and improving the full futures industry chain] The General Office of the People's Government of Guangdong Province issued a notice on the Implementation Plan for Promoting the Expansion and Quality Improvement of the Service Sector in Guangdong Province. It mentions that efforts will be made to cultivate and strengthen high-quality investment banks and investment institutions, encourage leading securities firms and fund management companies to enhance their service capabilities, compliance management capabilities, and market leadership, attract well-known domestic and international asset management institutions to establish corporate headquarters or regional headquarters in Guangdong, and encourage the development of the investment advisory business. Leverage the comprehensive service functions of the capital market, guide and support local cities in improving the databases of enterprises in the listing pipeline and M&A projects, work with stock exchanges, securities firms and other institutions to deliver thorough and detailed full-cycle advisory services for enterprises planning to go public, streamline approval processes involving the transfer of land use rights, real estate, and equity stakes in the M&A and restructuring of publicly listed firms, and encourage enterprises to expand the issuance scale of technology bonds, green bonds, and asset-backed securities. (from Wall Street CN APP) [Weifang: Expanding the 2026 Consumer Goods Trade-in Category Subsidy Campaign] The Weifang Municipal Bureau of Commerce released an announcement regarding the expansion of the 2026 consumer goods trade-in category subsidy campaign in Weifang City. It will provide subsidies in accordance with unified provincial categories and standards to individual consumers purchasing range hoods, household gas stoves (including integrated stoves), water purifiers, dishwashers, hearing aids, robot vacuum cleaners (including floor scrubbers), mobility-assisting exoskeleton robots, smart toilets, and other products. Individual consumers purchasing the above subsidized category products in Weifang City will receive a subsidy equal to 15% of the final selling price after all applicable discounts. Each person is limited to one subsidized item per category, with a maximum subsidy of 1,500 yuan per item, and the delivery address of the subsidized product must be within the administrative area of Weifang City. (Weifang Release) [INE Releases Notice on the Launch of Market Orders and Related Trading Order Sizes] According to the Shanghai International Energy Exchange (INE), market orders will be launched effective July 6, 2026 (i.e., starting from the night trading session on July 3, 2026). Market orders will apply to all listed futures and options contracts. For limit orders, the minimum order quantity is 1 lot per order; the maximum order quantity is 500 lots for futures contracts and 100 lots for options contracts. For market orders, the minimum order quantity is 1 lot per order; the maximum order quantity is 60 lots for futures contracts and 30 lots for options contracts. For settlement price trading orders, the minimum order quantity is 1 lot per order, and the maximum order quantity is 500 lots. On the US dollar front: Overnight, the US dollar index fell 0.06% to 100.76, after hitting an intraday high of 101.13 and a low of 100.69. On the weekly chart, the US dollar index rose for the week, gaining 0.97%. Market pricing indicated that bets on Fed rate hikes rose, fully pricing in a 25-basis-point rate hike in September. Data showed that foreign exchange traders, including hedge funds, were heavily buying options, betting that the dollar would strengthen further after the Fed sent hawkish signals this week and reinforced expectations of US rate hikes. According to traders, leveraged funds began buying dollar call options on Wednesday. This demand extended into Thursday as investors digested the anti-inflation rhetoric from the new Fed Chairman Warsh. Tobias Jungmann, Head of Americas FX Options at Bank of America, said, "We are seeing large-scale buying of USD call options, mainly concentrated in G-10 currencies. Given that current implied volatility is at low levels, establishing USD long positions via options looks very attractive." James Swindell, Senior FX Options Trader at Barclays in London, said, "We are seeing significant and broad-based demand for USD call options, particularly in EUR/USD and GBP/USD." (Jin10 Data APP) According to the CME "Fed Watch": The probability of the Fed keeping rates unchanged in July is 60.4%, and the probability of a cumulative 25-basis-point hike is 39.6%. For September, the probability of the Fed keeping rates unchanged is 31.2%, the probability of a cumulative 25-basis-point hike is 49.6%, and the probability of a cumulative 50-basis-point hike is 19.1%. (Jin10 Data APP) In other currencies: European Central Bank Chief Economist Lane said on Thursday that eurozone inflation will remain elevated despite the recent pullback in energy prices. To address the surge in energy costs since the outbreak of the Middle East conflict in late February, the ECB raised interest rates last week for the first time in nearly three years. However, following the announcement of a peace deal between Iran and the US, oil and natural gas prices subsequently fell sharply. Lane said the ECB has no doubt about the correctness of the rate hike decision and still expects inflation to stay above the 2% target for an extended period. He said, "We think food prices will rise, as will the prices of goods and services. Even in a milder scenario where oil prices pull back, the rate hike was justified." Additionally, ECB Governing Council member Wunsch said: If we see services inflation pick up, we might consider another 25-basis-point hike as insurance. If the data is unclear, I don't think there is any need to rush. (Jin10 Data) [Bank of England keeps rate unchanged in a 7-2 vote, says it will closely monitor Middle East situation] The Bank of England kept its rate at 3.75%, saying the recent drop in oil prices is "encouraging," although two policymakers voted for an immediate 25-basis-point hike over concerns about persistent inflation. External member Megan Greene joined the camp of Huw Pill, the lone dissenter in April and chief economist, voting to raise the rate to 4% immediately, citing an unstable price outlook despite the recent ceasefire agreement between the US and Iran. (from Wall Street News APP) On the macro front: Next week, the following data will be released: China's one-year loan prime rate as of June 22, Canada's May CPI m/m, Eurozone June consumer confidence index preliminary, France's June manufacturing PMI preliminary, Germany's June manufacturing PMI preliminary, Eurozone June manufacturing PMI preliminary, UK June manufacturing PMI preliminary, UK June services PMI preliminary, UK June CBI industrial orders balance, US ADP employment change for the week ending June 6 weekly, US June S&P Global manufacturing PMI preliminary, US June S&P Global services PMI preliminary, US June Richmond Fed manufacturing index, Australia's May unadjusted CPI y/y, Germany's June IFO business climate index, Switzerland's June ZEW investor confidence index, US Q1 current account, US May new home sales annualized, Australia's May seasonally adjusted unemployment rate, Germany's July GfK consumer confidence index, US initial jobless claims for the week ending June 20, US May core PCE price index y/y, US May personal spending m/m, US Q1 real GDP annualized q/q final, US Q1 real personal consumption expenditures q/q preliminary, US Q1 real personal consumption expenditures q/q final, US Q1 core PCE price index annualized q/q final, US May core PCE price index m/m, US May durable goods orders m/m, US June final University of Michigan consumer sentiment, US June final 1-year inflation expectations, and other data. Also next week, attention should be paid to: ECB President Christine Lagarde addressing the EU Parliament; Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem delivering remarks; the 17th Summer Davos Forum held in Dalian from June 23 to 25; the Bank of Japan releasing a summary of opinions from its June monetary policy meeting board members; Nvidia holding its annual general meeting; the Bank of Canada releasing its monetary policy meeting minutes; the US Fed releasing its annual bank stress test results; Bank of Japan Governor Ueda Kazuo attending a central bank lecture event hosted by the International Monetary Fund (IMF); today saw the maturity of 300 billion yuan of one-year medium-term lending facilities (MLF) and 248 billion yuan of seven-day reverse repos; FOMC permanent voting member and New York Fed President John Williams speaking; 2027 FOMC voting member and Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee speaking; and 2026 FOMC voting member and Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari speaking. Crude oil: Overnight, both oil futures gained: WTI crude rose 0.91%, while Brent crude rose 0.47%. On a weekly basis, WTI crude futures posted a second straight weekly decline, falling 9.83% for the week; Brent crude futures also fell for a second consecutive week, down 8.53%. International crude oil futures opened lower on Friday, struggled to rebound intraday, and turned lower several times. They hit a fresh daily low after reports of a ceasefire between Israel and Hezbollah, but as reports emerged that both sides continued to exchange fire after the ceasefire, they turned positive again late in the European session. Brent crude struggled around the $80 mark throughout the day. (Wall Street CN) Iran's Foreign Ministry stated that negotiations on a permanent agreement with the US will only begin after a permanent end to the war in Lebanon, the full lifting of the US blockade, US issuance of waivers for Iranian oil, and the release of Iran's frozen assets. (Jin10 Data APP) Iran is shipping a large amount of oil that was previously stranded due to the US blockade, potentially a positive development for Tehran after it signed a tentative peace deal with Washington on Wednesday. Shipping data compiled by Bloomberg showed that 11 tankers carrying a total of 20 million barrels of crude oil departed from Iran's Chabahar port on the Gulf of Oman this week. Previously, the US military had prevented these tankers from entering the Indian Ocean, a move aimed at restricting Tehran's access to petrodollars. (Jin10 Data APP) Separately, data from the Intercontinental Exchange (ICE) showed that during the week ended June 16, speculative net long positions in Brent crude futures fell by 94,763 contracts to 114,128 contracts. (Jin10 Data APP) In addition, due to contract rollover, the NYMEX July crude oil futures will see their final floor trading at 2:30 AM on June 23 and final electronic trading at 5:00 AM that day. Please pay attention to the exchange's expiration and rollover notices to manage risk. In addition, the expiration dates of US oil contracts on some trading platforms are usually one day earlier than the official NYMEX expiration. Please pay extra attention.
Jun 21, 2026 18:43Fed Hawkish Signals Exceed Expectations; Precious Metals Under Short-Term Pressure but Downside Limited June 18 — At 2:00 AM Beijing Time on June 18, the Federal Reserve kept the federal funds rate unchanged at 3.50%-3.75%, marking the fourth consecutive hold. The statement was significantly shortened in length and removed language hinting at further rate cuts. The dot plot showed nine officials expect a rate hike this year, while newly appointed Chairman Warsh did not submit a dot plot and declined to provide forward guidance. Hawkish signals pushed market pricing for a year-end rate hike up to 38 basis points. From a policy perspective, this FOMC meeting delivered hawkish signals that exceeded market expectations. Combined with the return of rate-hike expectations in the dot plot, it signals that the Fed's communication tone has shifted from "pause and watch" to "potential hiking," putting near-term pressure on precious metals. However, the fourth consecutive hold itself was in line with market expectations, and any actual rate hike still requires more data for validation, so the marginal impact of the policy signal itself is relatively limited. More critically, earlier economic data — U.S. May nonfarm payrolls rose by 172,000, beating expectations, with a combined upward revision of 93,000 for March-April — underscores that labor market resilience remains the most significant headwind suppressing rate-cut expectations and is the core bearish factor for precious metals recently. By contrast, May headline CPI matched expectations while core CPI came in slightly below consensus, meaning inflation data did not reinforce the tightening narrative beyond expectations, and its bearish impact is comparatively moderate. On balance, precious metals face dual pressure from hawkish policy signals and labor market resilience, but the elevated rate-hike expectations are still in the pricing-in phase, and the market may not form a systemic downward resonance at current levels. The trading logic will continue to hinge on subsequent nonfarm payrolls, CPI data, and actual communication from Warsh. US-Iran Peace Talks Advance; Geopolitical Risk Premium Unwinds June 18 — The presidents of the United States and Iran have signed an electronic memorandum of understanding (MoU). The official 14-point text largely matches prior media disclosures, and both sides are set to formally sign the agreement in Switzerland on Friday. Trump stated that if follow-up implementation of the MoU falls short of satisfaction, bombing operations would resume, and also revealed discussions with Syrian leaders on striking Hezbollah. Meanwhile, southern Lebanon witnessed multiple Israeli attacks, and Israel's finance minister indicated no withdrawal on Friday or thereafter. The geopolitical situation remains in a complex tug-of-war characterized by "negotiations alongside conflict." In the near term, the signing of the MoU marks a substantive phase in ceasefire negotiations, with market expectations for the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz strengthening, leading to further unwinding of the risk premium. Should the formal agreement be finalized on Friday, structural concerns over crude supply would materially ease, putting downward pressure on the oil price center, which in turn would cool global inflation expectations. From a medium-to-long-term perspective, if sustained oil weakness drives down energy costs, the Fed's monetary policy room would reopen, and market logic could gradually shift from "tightening expectations" toward a "rate-cut cycle," potentially offering new macro support for precious metals. Overall, US-Iran relations are currently in a phase of "peace talks advancing, conflicts unresolved," and market pricing will revolve around Friday's agreement implementation and subsequent execution risks in a repeated back-and-forth manner. Early Hiking Cycle Pressure Does Not Alter Long-Term Logic; Precious Metals' Allocation Value Remains Prominent Historical experience shows that in the early stages of every rate-hiking cycle, precious metals typically come under pressure from rising nominal rates and a stronger dollar, but the trend is not unidirectional downward. As the hiking cycle deepens, growing concerns over recession risks and liquidity stress increasingly highlight gold's role as an inflation hedge and safe-haven asset, with its price center tending to rise in the middle-to-late stages. Therefore, even if the Fed continues on a hawkish path, the pressure on precious metals may not be sustained; liquidity conditions and shifts in macro expectations also influence price dynamics. Of course, our overall bullish long-term logic for precious metals remains unchanged: First, global central banks continue to accumulate gold, with de-dollarization and reserve diversification strategies providing a solid floor for gold prices. Second, the U.S. dollar's credit system faces deep erosion — high interest rates on U.S. Treasuries imply high risk, and over the long run, U.S. debt rollover pressures and fiscal indiscipline are accelerating global de-dollarization. Third, the ever-expanding U.S. government debt stock and deteriorating fiscal sustainability raise the risk of future debt monetization and dollar depreciation. As a non-liability, supra-sovereign hard asset, gold's safe-haven and store-of-value functions hold irreplaceable appeal in the current macro environment. At the same time, geopolitical conflicts continue to simmer without truly subsiding, while global supply chains and energy markets remain volatile, with inflation persistence lingering. These uncertainties will collectively underpin the demand for gold and silver as safe-haven allocation assets, further boosting their strategic value over the medium-to-long term. From the Gold/Silver Ratio Perspective: Silver Under Pressure in the Short Term, but Outperforming Gold in the Medium-to-Long Term Remains Intact Historically, the gold/silver ratio exhibits significant mean-reverting behavior, with its long-term center roughly fluctuating between 60 and 70. However, under extreme macro environments, it can deviate markedly — for instance, the ratio widened sharply after the 2008 financial crisis and approached a historical extreme near 120 during the 2020 pandemic. The underlying dynamic is that during extreme risk-off episodes, the market prioritizes gold as a safe-haven asset, while silver, burdened by its industrial metal characteristics, tends to face systematic selling. Thus, the gold/silver ratio's cyclical movement can be summarized as: widening during crises (silver underperforms) and narrowing during recovery/inflation cycles (silver outperforms). Its essence is a cyclical indicator driven by the alternating dominance of safe-haven attributes versus industrial attributes. In the near term, the gold/silver ratio is more prone to stage-wise upward moves or range-bound drift with an upward bias. On one hand, silver has already posted notable gains, with crowded positioning making it more vulnerable to pullback pressure. On the other hand, the photovoltaic industry — a key pillar of silver industrial demand — is expected to see cell silver consumption decline by 9.51% year-over-year in 2026, and with ongoing silver-reduction progress and evolving cell product structures, annual silver consumption is projected to maintain a roughly 5 percentage-point decline through 2030. Although positive terminal installation expectations may boost cell production volumes, translating to some incremental demand, when converted to silver demand, a roughly 20% decline is anticipated this year. Over the long cycle, 2026 also marks a pivotal turning point in silver's industrial demand structure. The low-voltage electrical equipment sector, as a rigid support segment, exhibits strong irreplaceability in its silver demand. Emerging sectors such as new energy vehicles, PCBs, and SiC chips are rapidly expanding their end-market bases, and despite unchanged unit silver consumption, overall demand continues to grow steadily. Therefore, we maintain our core view that the gold/silver ratio will trend downward in the medium-to-long term — i.e., we are constructive on silver outperforming gold. The driving logic will gradually shift from rates and liquidity toward energy transition and industrial demand. Silver is transforming from a traditional precious metal into a strategically important industrial metal with rising exposure to photovoltaics, AI data centers, and grid upgrades, while supply remains highly inelastic due to its heavy dependence on lead-zinc and copper byproduct production. Once the global economy enters a rate-cutting cycle or real rates decline, silver's industrial elasticity will significantly amplify its upside potential, whereas gold, supported more by central bank buying and safe-haven demand, tends to follow a smoother trajectory.
Jun 18, 2026 18:44Staff Writer | June 15, 2026 | 8:19 am Amid gold’s recent weakness, UBS Group has slashed its near-term outlook on the yellow metal, though the bank still sees prices reaching higher over the longer horizon. In a note published last week, the Swiss bank said it sees prices to drop by another $300-$900/oz., citing what it calls a “double whammy” of stronger US economic data and a delayed Federal Reserve easing. “Gold has faced renewed pressure as resilient labor market data and higher real yields prompted markets to shift expectations toward a possible rate hike this year,” UBS strategists Dominic Schnider, Giovanni Staunovo and Wayne Gordon wrote. The momentum indicators now suggest that prices “may continue to gravitate toward the $3,850-4,000/oz. range in the near term,” they added. The revision, according to the UBS analysts, follows gold’s “muted response to the escalation between the US and Iran has encouraged some profit-taking,” which they believe left prices “more exposed to traditional macro drivers like real yields and the dollar.” It follows the bank’s downward revision in May, when it trimmed its year-end target from $5,900 to $5,500/oz. Since then, gold prices have declined further after the latest round of US data releases, which included a stronger-than-expected jobs report. That print reinforced market expectations of a Fed rate hike, which could begin as early as December. Bullion tends to thrive during periods of low interest, and the threat of rate hikes in the wake of the US-Iran war has created downward pressure on the metal. After surging to a record high of nearly $5,600/oz. in January, gold has now erased almost all of its gains this year. Long-term bullish Still, banks including UBS see gold rebounding in the coming months, with prices supported by strong central bank demand for the metal as well as the deteriorating US fiscal situation. A potential end to the Middle East conflict is also seen as a tailwind. On Monday, gold rose by 3.3% following reports of a US-Iran deal. In its note, UBS said it remains “constructive on gold over the next 12 months,” with its base case still assuming the Fed cuts rates by up to 50 basis points in 2027 alongside below-trend US growth. Source: https://www.mining.com/ubs-sees-gold-price-falling-further-but-remains-long-term-bullish/
Jun 18, 2026 10:50(Kitco News) - The gold market continues to regain lost ground, and although the precious metal isn’t out of danger just yet, current prices still represent an attractive entry point for investors looking to build a position, according to Wells Fargo. In the bank’s mid-year outlook webinar, Sameer Samana, Head of Global Equities and Real Assets Strategy, said there is still a risk that gold prices could fall below $4,000 per ounce, but he is maintaining a long-term bullish outlook. On Tuesday, the bank raised its year-end gold target to $5,300-$5,500 an ounce and expects prices to climb further to $5,800-$6,000 by the end of 2027. The bank's strategists argue that the forces driving gold's rally are structural rather than cyclical, suggesting the current bull market still has room to run. Gold remains one of Wells Fargo's highest-conviction investment ideas, as the bank sees persistent inflation pressures, rising government debt, and elevated geopolitical uncertainty continuing to support the precious metal through 2027. "We firmly believe that gold is that additional diversifier," said Samana. "More and more in this highly uncertain world, central banks are looking around for something in addition to U.S. Treasuries and cash with respect to where to park their reserves." The outlook comes as gold continues to recover from a sharp correction after posting strong gains over the past two years, culminating in a record high in January. Spot gold last traded at $4,357.10 an ounce, up 0.61% on the day. However, gold prices are still down more than 20% from their highs at the start of the year. During the webinar, Chief Investment Officer Darrell Cronk described 2026 as being driven by "geopolitics, geography and geology," highlighting ongoing conflicts in the Middle East and Eastern Europe alongside intensifying competition for critical resources. He said these trends are helping to reshape global investment flows and support demand for real assets. While Wells Fargo expects inflation to moderate somewhat in the second half of the year, the bank does not see a return to the low-inflation environment that characterized the decade before the pandemic. Inflation has been supported by tariffs, higher energy costs, and growing artificial intelligence-related demand, according to Cronk. That inflation outlook is one reason Wells Fargo remains skeptical that long-term Treasury yields will fall significantly from current levels. During the briefing, Cronk argued that markets continue to underestimate the impact of persistent inflation and rising fiscal deficits on bond yields. "I think the market has gotten interest rates wrong for some time now," he said, noting that Wells Fargo entered the year expecting Treasury yields to remain higher than Wall Street consensus forecasts. He added that inflation premiums, term premiums, and growth expectations all point to long-term yields remaining elevated. Those dynamics could prove particularly supportive for gold . Responding to a question about whether inflation could outpace bond yields and potentially push real yields lower, Cronk said the Federal Reserve remains constrained by its dual mandate and is unlikely to aggressively tighten policy unless inflation accelerates materially. While Wells Fargo expects inflation to cool somewhat as energy markets stabilize, the bank sees continued pressure from fiscal spending and structural investment trends. Samana said that this environment creates a compelling asymmetric opportunity for gold investors. "To me, it's one of the highest-convexity ideas that we have," he said. "For gold to not do well, you would need countries around the world to rein in their deficits and defend price stability. The fact that policymakers will always take the easy way out, to me, is the case for gold ." He added that while gold could experience periodic pullbacks, the long-term risk-reward profile remains attractive. "I think eventually you're seeing something with a six handle out in 2027," Samana said, referring to Wells Fargo's expectation that gold prices could surpass $6,000 an ounce over the next 18 months. Beyond gold , Wells Fargo is also constructive on industrial metals, arguing that artificial intelligence infrastructure spending, data center construction, and global electrification trends should continue to support demand for copper and other key materials. The bank expects both precious and industrial metals to benefit from the global race to secure strategic resources and build next-generation technologies. Source: https://www.kitco.com/news/article/2026-06-17/golds-bull-market-has-room-run-inflation-risks-fiscal-deficits-support
Jun 18, 2026 10:42(Kitco News) – Even when real yields decline and the dollar weakens, gold prices could struggle to catch a bid as strong equity markets will continue to draw investors to risk assets, according to commodity analysts at Société Générale. The French banking giant cautioned that gold investors may be in for an extended period of muted ETF flows combined with a pause in central bank purchases. “The market is finely balanced, and the path of monetary policy remains the key variable for gold through its impact on real rates and the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset,” they wrote. “Our analyst’s central scenario is driven by persistent inflation, oil-driven price shocks and a clear ‘higher for-longer’ rates regime.” SocGen analysts expect the world’s major central banks will remain cautious, with “the Fed on hold, the ECB still leaning hawkish, and the BoJ gradually tightening.” Going forward, the analysts see two potential macroeconomic paths. The first is “an AI-led, inflationary growth cycle keeping policy tight,” while the second involves “an energy-driven stagflation shock, particularly in the event of prolonged supply disruptions.” “Our analysts expect inflation across the US and Europe to stay elevated into early 2027 before moderating, providing only temporary support to gold’s hedge appeal,” they warned. “Crucially, they view policy stability rather than easing as the baseline, limiting upside for gold in the near term.” SocGen said they do expect some support to emerge later “as real yields gradually decline and the USD initially softens,” but they warned that even then, gold’s upside will be limited by “resilient global growth, strong equity markets and a continued investor preference for risk assets.” “On the demand side, subdued ETF inflows and constrained central bank activity limit the strength of financial demand, though a recovery is anticipated into 2027,” they added. “Physical demand, particularly jewellery, shows resilience in value terms and could provide marginal support as prices consolidate.” Source: https://www.kitco.com/news/article/2026-06-17/persistent-inflation-oil-driven-price-shocks-and-higher-longer-rates-will
Jun 18, 2026 10:40Published: Jun 16, 2026 - 11:32 PM (Kitco News) – Gold’s 26% decline during the Iran conflict came from a boost to the dollar, yields and equities which overwhelmed the yellow metal's safe-haven appeal, but persistent inflation, policy uncertainty and central bank demand remain intact, and gold prices will still reach nearly $4,800 in 2026 and $4,900 in 2027, according to Barclays. In a research note published Monday, the UK banking giant’s cross-asset research team led by Lefteris Farmakis and Themistoklis Fiotakis said gold’s three-month selloff was driven by the stronger U.S. dollar, white-hot equity markets absorbing all the available risk capital, and the unwinding of leveraged gold positions, with Russian and Turkish central bank gold sales also contributing to the weakness. The analysts said gold’s slide from its January peak to its June trough reflected a normalization of real interest rates, markets pricing out Fed rate cuts this year, and the short-term appeal of rising stocks detracting from gold’s investment appeal. The Barclays team calculated that the rise in the dollar index and the 10% S&P 500 rally accounted for 10% of the gold price decline, with the remainder coming from position unwinding in the metals markets. The analysts said these factors are temporary, however, and that gold’s structural drivers — persistent inflation, policy uncertainty and continued reserve diversification — are still intact, and they will reassert themselves as the geopolitical stress related to the Hormuz crisis dissipates. They characterized these drivers as “slow-moving variables whose influence accumulates over time,” which is why they were ill-suited to support gold prices during the short-term shock of the Iranian crisis. Barclays calculated that every percentage-point increase in inflation gives gold a 5% uplift, and they believe the inflationary impulse of the Iran energy shock will be supportive. The bank estimates gold’s fair value price currently sits at $4,150 per ounce, and they expect a rebound now that the Iran conflict appears to be winding down. The Barclays team said they now anticipate a reassertion of the dollar’s downward trend, a return to consistent central bank buying and sustained upward pressure on inflation from higher energy prices. Barclays said they are maintaining their 2026 and 2027 gold price forecasts at $4,791 and $4,900 per ounce, but warned that there may still be some short-term mark-to-market downside. The analysts also recommended exposure to gold mining stocks, including Endeavour, Hochschild, Fresnillo, Newmont and Agnico Eagle. “Recent price gyrations notwithstanding, if there is a period when gold ought to be trading at a premium, it is now,” they said. Source: https://www.kitco.com/news/article/2026-06-16/barclays-sees-gold-hitting-4791-2026-4900-2027-iran-correction-fades
Jun 18, 2026 10:39