Gold has been pulled in two directions in recent weeks. On one side, rising oil prices and escalating geopolitical tensions have strengthened the metal’s safe-haven appeal.
May 6, 2026 15:56Tuesday, 28/04/2026 | 17:51 GMT+8 by Damian Chmiel Gold falls 3% to $4,620/oz on Tuesday, April 28, 2026, testing three-week lows as Fed hawkish hold lifts dollar and Treasury yields. XAU chart shows $4,300 as the bull-bear line and a weekly close below targets $3,400 on a 100% Fibonacci extension, a 26% drop. JPMorgan still targets $6,300 by year-end and Goldman Sachs holds $5,400, calling the March correction a positioning unwind. Gold traded at $4,620 per ounce on Tuesday, April 28, 2026, falling for a second straight session and testing three-week lows as a hawkish Federal Reserve hold lifted the dollar and pushed Treasury yields back toward 4.4%. The metal has now lost close to 3% on the week, rejected the upper boundary of the multi-month consolidation defined by the January 28 record close at $5,400, and slipped back below the 50-day EMA. With the FOMC decision Wednesday, U.S. Q1 GDP later in the week, and the Strait of Hormuz still partially closed, why is gold falling has become the most-asked question in the precious metals complex. Follow me on X for real-time market analysis: @ChmielDk . Why Gold Price Is Going Down Today? Dollar, Yields, Hawkish Fed Hold The pullback is more about real yields than tail risk. The dollar index has held above 98.5, ten-year Treasury yields are running between 4.3% and 4.4%, and the CME FedWatch tool puts the probability of an unchanged rate at Wednesday's FOMC meeting at 99.5%. Each of those signals raises the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset. Bas Kooijman, CEO and Asset Manager of DHF Capital S.A., framed the macro tape this way: "Gold fell to multi-week lows on Tuesday, pressured by a firm US dollar and rising Treasury yields." How High Can Gold Go? UBP Rebuilds Bullion Positions and Reaffirms $6,000 Gold Price Prediction for 2026 Why Gold Is Surging With Silver and Why Experts Predict $7,000 Price in 2026 Why Gold Is Going Up? Goldman Gold Price Prediction Sees $5,400 as XAU Rebounds Kooijman added that prolonged disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz are pushing energy prices higher, reinforcing inflation concerns and feeding back into yields, with gold-backed ETFs flipping to outflows last week after three weeks of inflows. Linh Tran, Market Analyst at XS.com, sees a controlled distribution rather than a panic flush: "After reaching a peak near 4,900 USD/oz, gold has entered a relatively deep corrective phase, pulling back toward the 4,700 area. However, this decline has not been characterized by panic selling, but rather by a controlled sequence of losses." Tran's read fits the daily chart, where lower closes have been measured rather than capitulatory. The structural drivers pulling gold lower this week: Dollar index above 98.5, sustained for the third straight session Ten-year Treasury yields back at 4.3-4.4%, lifting real yields CME FedWatch pricing 99.5% probability of an unchanged FOMC at 3.50-3.75% Gold ETF flows turned negative last week after three weeks of inflows Strait of Hormuz disruption keeping oil bid and the rate-cut path further out ETF Outflows and the Strait of Hormuz Premium The flow picture has shifted decisively in the past week. Last week's ETF outflows, the first since early April, broke a three-week inflow streak. The reversal coincided with West Texas Intermediate climbing back above $100 per barrel and 25 commercial vessels being redirected away from Iranian ports over the weekend. That oil-yields feedback loop has now become gold's dominant short-term driver. Higher oil keeps inflation expectations elevated; elevated inflation expectations keep the Fed on hold; a Fed on hold keeps real yields elevated; elevated real yields keep gold under pressure even as the geopolitical backdrop, in classical terms, should support it. As I wrote in my March crash analysis , the same paradox crushed gold roughly 15% in March 2026. Key flow and physical market data points entering the FOMC week: Spot XAU/USD trades roughly 18% below the $5,595 January 29 all-time high Western ETF outflows resumed last week, snapping a three-week inflow streak WTI crude back above $100 per barrel on Strait of Hormuz disruption Central bank buying still running near 60 tonnes per month, per Goldman Sachs Gold Technical Analysis: The $4,300 Bull-Bear Line My chart shows the same picture that has defined gold since late January: a wide consolidation channel between $5,400 at the top and the $4,300 to $4,400 zone at the bottom. The upper bound is the January 28 record close, retested without breaking on March 2. The lower bound is fixed by two anchors, the October 2025 highs at around $4,360 and the panic lows from the week of March 23-27, where price briefly tagged the 200-day EMA at $4,200. In 15 years on the precious metals beat at FinanceMagnates.com, documented across my analyst page , I have watched gold violate multi-month consolidation channels twice, both times with the kind of momentum visible on this week's chart. Tuesday's session moved decisively away from the 50-day EMA, which now sits as resistance overhead, and the rejection at the channel top is the cleanest sell signal the daily chart has produced since my March 25 reversal call at the 200 EMA played out. A breakout up from this range opens price discovery and a run at fresh all-time highs above $5,600. A breakout down is what concerns me. Below $4,300, my Fibonacci extension based on the full 2024-2026 trend projects 100% extension at $3,400, which lines up almost exactly with the April 2025 highs that capped price for four straight months before the September acceleration. From the current $4,620 level, that scenario implies a 26% drop, in line with the bearish framework I detailed in my previous analysis . Gold price technical analysis. Source: Tradingview.com Until $4,300 breaks on a weekly close, this is consolidation, not a confirmed downtrend. Below $4,300, my chart has very little technical support before $3,400. Level Type Notes $5,400 Resistance / Channel top January 28 record close, retested March 2 $4,800 Resistance / 50-day EMA Lost on this week's break $4,620 Current spot Tuesday, April 28, 2026 $4,360 Support / October 2025 highs Lower bound of multi-month range $4,200 Support / 200-day EMA Tested briefly during March 23 panic $3,400 Extension target April 2025 highs and 100% Fibo extension Gold Price Predictions 2026: How Low Can Gold Go? The institutional band remains wide and stays bullish even after the spring drawdown. JPMorgan Global Research holds a $6,300 year-end 2026 target, with strategist Greg Shearer projecting average quarterly investor and central bank demand of around 585 tonnes; my reading is that the call needs another credible Fed pivot to play out before year-end. Goldman Sachs sticks with $5,400, framing the March selloff as a leveraged-positioning unwind rather than a fundamental break, and on the chart that view aligns with the consolidation thesis as long as $4,300 holds. UBS sees $5,200 by June and $5,900 by late 2026, but its short-term cut explicitly cited stronger dollar and oil pressure, which is the exact tape gold is trading right now. Wells Fargo at $6,100 to $6,300 and Deutsche Bank at $6,000 round out the bullish institutional cluster, all anchored on the same fiscal-debasement and central-bank-buying thesis that the FinanceMagnates.com report on UBP rebuilding bullion positions detailed earlier this month. The Reuters poll of 30 analysts has settled at a $4,746 median for 2026, almost on top of current spot, suggesting the consensus has already absorbed the bearish leg. The same complex dynamic is playing out across the silver leg of the precious metals trade , where every move in gold is being amplified. Source Target Notes JPMorgan $6,300 Year-end 2026, 585 tonnes/quarter demand assumption UBS (long) $5,900 Late 2026 target, $5,200 short-term by June Wells Fargo $6,100-6,300 Raised from $4,500-$4,700 in February 2026 Deutsche Bank $6,000 Reiterated by Michael Hsueh, Head of Metals Research Goldman Sachs $5,400 Year-end, base case excludes new buyer wave Reuters poll $4,746 Median of 30 analysts for 2026 My TA (bear) $3,400 Activated only on weekly close below $4,300 FAQ, Gold Price Analysis Why is gold falling today? Gold is falling on April 28, 2026, because the U.S. dollar index is above 98.5, ten-year Treasury yields are at 4.3% to 4.4%, and CME FedWatch shows a 99.5% probability the Federal Reserve holds rates at 3.50% to 3.75% on Wednesday. Higher real yields raise the opportunity cost of a non-yielding asset, and last week's ETF outflows reinforced the move. How low can gold go in 2026? Based on my technical analysis, gold's bull-bear line is $4,300. A weekly close below activates a 100% Fibonacci extension at $3,400, anchored by the April 2025 highs that capped price for four straight months. That implies a 26% drop from current levels. Above $4,300, the metal stays inside its multi-month consolidation rather than a confirmed downtrend. Will gold crash below $4,000? A close below $4,300 on the weekly chart is the trigger I am watching for a sustained move under $4,000. The 200-day EMA sits at $4,200, briefly tagged during the March 23 panic. Without that level breaking on closing basis, talk of a crash is premature. Above $4,300, the structural bull thesis from JPMorgan and Goldman Sachs remains intact. What is the 200-day EMA on gold? The 200-day EMA on gold sits at approximately $4,200 per ounce as of April 28, 2026. The level was last tested during the panic session of March 23, when intraday price briefly touched the average before reversing higher. The 200 EMA has acted as the definitive bull-bear boundary for gold since the metal first cleared $4,000 in October 2025. Should I buy gold now? This article is not investment advice. From a chart perspective, gold trades inside a wide consolidation between $4,300 support and $5,400 resistance. Risk-managed entries become clearer only after the FOMC decision and the response at $4,300. JPMorgan targets $6,300 and Goldman Sachs targets $5,400 for year-end 2026, while my chart's bear scenario warns of $3,400 if support breaks. Source: https://www.financemagnates.com/trending/why-is-gold-falling-gold-price-risk-crash-to-3400/
Apr 29, 2026 10:29Wells Fargo Securities' bull-case forecast for gold suggests that after last month's pullback in gold prices, gold prices could surge remarkably to $8,000 per ounce . Before the US-Iran war broke out on February 28 this year, gold had been one of the hottest market momentum plays of the year. However, after the war began, gold prices declined. In March, gold futures prices fell nearly 11%, marking the largest single-month decline since June 2013. But the Wall Street investment bank expects the "debasement trade" — in which central banks around the world sell fiat currencies such as the US dollar in favor of more neutral safe-haven assets — could push the precious metal to new heights. Wells Fargo Securities' chief equity strategist Ohsung Kwon wrote: "We are in the fourth currency debasement cycle, which started in 2022." Kwon added: "After the recent pullback in gold prices, prices are now closer to our model's fair value of $4,500 per ounce. Looking at the three drivers, all of them suggest that currency debasement will deepen further from current levels." The strategist said that four out of five economic scenarios point to further currency debasement, and gold prices could rise to $8,000 per ounce by 2027 as a result . Spot gold and gold futures were last trading near $4,800 per ounce, implying more than 66% upside room . Conversely, Kwon's bear-case forecast shows gold prices falling to $4,000 per ounce by the end of 2027, a decline of about 17% from current levels. Kwon uses the M2/gold ratio — M2 money supply divided by the gold price per ounce — to identify the current cycle. The analyst said the ratio shows that the latest debasement cycle began in 2022, when Russia launched its military operation against Ukraine and the US entered a rate-hiking cycle, prompting central banks worldwide to ramp up gold purchases. Previous currency debasement cycles for gold occurred during: the Great Depression; the "Nixon Shock" — when then-President Richard Nixon ended the convertibility of the US dollar into gold — and the subsequent stagflation era; the War on Terror in the early 2000s; and the subprime mortgage crisis. Kwon added that currency debasement cycles last an average of 8.5 years, and the current cycle, at 3.5 years in, has not yet reached its halfway point.
Apr 17, 2026 20:23Gold has lost significant ground in recent weeks, but for Wells Fargo, this apparently changes little in the long-term picture. The US bank has reaffirmed its positive outlook for the precious metal and significantly raised its price target for the current year.
Apr 1, 2026 11:10Gold is doing the opposite of what it should. The metal is falling for a reason most investors did not see coming. Wall Street's biggest banks have not changed their outlook. Here is why that matters.
Mar 23, 2026 11:29According to Wells Fargo's mid-2025 outlook report, precious metals will continue to benefit from geopolitical conflicts and economic uncertainties, with gold prices expected to hit a record high of $3,600 per ounce in 2026. Analysts noted in the report that the significant correction in commodity prices presents attractive opportunities later this year and into 2026. Additionally, they anticipate that improvements in the US economic conditions later in 2025 will drive growth in commodity demand. Wells Fargo recommends that investors pivot to sectors that may benefit from an improving macro environment, such as energy or precious metals, and adjust their portfolios to hedge against policy and geopolitical uncertainties. Exercise patience Wells Fargo emphasized in the report that rapid changes in economic policies over the past few months have disrupted investors and capital markets. Since the 2024 US elections, uncertainty surrounding US economic policies has continued to escalate, primarily due to tariff volatility, with recent uncertainties surpassing those during the COVID-19 pandemic. Analysts highlighted that these uncertainties are expected to continue driving gold prices higher over the next two years, as private investors and global central banks will continue to purchase gold. By 2026, central banks alone are expected to account for 21% of global gold demand. Meanwhile, US short-term interest rates are expected to decline in 2026, and the US dollar is also expected to rebound mildly, which will further strengthen the upward trend in precious metal prices. However, analysts also caution that investor optimism about precious metals' rise has reached levels historically preceding significant corrections, leading them to prefer exercising patience and waiting for price dips before buying. The bank expects gold prices to pull back slightly to a range of $3,000 to $3,200 by the end of this year, with the outlook for gold prices rising to $3,600 per ounce by the end of 2026. Analysts also recommend that investors focus on quality factors rather than speculative assets and diversify their portfolios through commodities like precious metals, which may outperform broader market indices. Chantelle Schieven, Managing Director of Capitalight Research, also believes that due to the resilience of the US economy and labour market, gold prices may stagnate throughout the summer but will oscillate near high levels. However, considering the inflationary impact of tariffs, she expects the US to face stagflation risks over the next two years, which will support gold prices.
Jun 11, 2025 15:08