July 10, 2026 Although the price of gold has regained the $4,100-per-ounce mark, analysts at Metals Focus say the precious metal is set to undergo a summer consolidation for the time being. However, this phase offers promising prospects: Later in the year, strong fundamental drivers are likely to push the price significantly higher again. Interest rate fears and a seasonal lull are dampening short-term momentum Currently, the market is primarily on edge due to U.S. monetary policy. New geopolitical tensions in the Middle East, as well as the immense investment boom in the field of artificial intelligence, are keeping inflation stubbornly high. This is fueling market concerns that the Federal Reserve could raise interest rates again this year. For gold, which generates no current income, rising opportunity costs represent a strong headwind and cap any rapid upward breakout. Compounding this is the typical seasonal weakness. July and August are traditionally considered slow months for physical demand. The already high price level has recently caused a noticeable slowdown in jewelry consumption and general retail interest. Even though there are initial, tentative signs of recovery in key Asian markets such as China and India, the typically strong demand phase there will not begin until late summer at the earliest. The current trading range is therefore likely to persist throughout the summer months. Structural drivers remain intact: Comeback expected in the fall Despite these short-term hurdles, experts at Metals Focus do not see the broader bull market as being in any danger. A breakout from the sideways trend will become more likely once the market’s interest rate speculation cools down. There are strong indications that the U.S. Federal Reserve will ultimately leave key interest rates unchanged for the remainder of 2026. To avoid an economic slowdown or even a recession, policymakers are likely to grudgingly tolerate moderate inflation above their target, according to the analysts. As soon as the market prices in this easing of monetary policy—expected sometime during the third quarter—the gold price will once again have room to rise. The structural pillars underpinning the recent record-breaking rally remain unshaken, according to Metals Focus. Persistent geopolitical risks—particularly given Iran’s focus on the strategically important Strait of Hormuz—continue to warrant high risk premiums. Coupled with the mounting uncertainty surrounding the U.S. elections, the ambitious valuations in the stock markets, and concerns about the U.S. dollar, the fundamentals for the precious metal remain extremely robust. Those who weather the current summer lull will be well-positioned: In the medium term, gold remains the preferred safe haven and an essential component of portfolio diversification, the report concludes. Source: https://goldinvest.de/en/gold-price-a-summer-breather-before-the-next-rally
Jul 14, 2026 09:16SMM, July 14: Metals Market: Overnight, base metals on overseas and domestic markets showed mixed performance. LME tin led the decline with a drop of 2.47%, while LME lead, LME zinc, and SHFE tin all fell over 1%—LME lead (-1.32%), LME zinc (-1.23%), and SHFE tin (-1.27%)—with the rest of the metals seeing relatively small changes. Alumina main contract edged up 0.15%, while cast aluminum main contract edged down 0.22%. Overnight, ferrous metals generally fell, with only iron ore and stainless steel rising—stainless steel gained 1.85% and iron ore rose 0.47%. Hot-rolled coil and rebar both edged down. For coking coal and coke, coking coal fell 0.04% and coke dropped 1.04%. In precious metals overnight, COMEX gold fell 2.55%, briefly dipping below the $4,000/oz psychological level again during the session, while COMEX silver dropped 3.63%. In China, SHFE gold fell 2.12% and SHFE silver declined 2.84%, mainly as escalating Middle East tensions fueled rate-hike expectations. As of 6:44 a.m. July 14, overnight closing prices: Macro Front China: [State Council: Target total retail sales of consumer goods to reach around 60 trillion yuan by 2030] The State Council approved the “Expanding Consumption” 15th Five-Year Plan, aiming for the consumer market to keep expanding in scale by 2030, with the household consumption rate rising notably and total consumption of goods and services growing rapidly; total retail sales of consumer goods are to reach around 60 trillion yuan, providing a stronger boost to economic growth. The consumption structure will be further optimized, with the share of per capita service consumption expenditure in per capita consumption expenditure steadily increasing, development-oriented and improvement-oriented consumption continuing to grow, digital consumption scale constantly expanding, and urban-rural, regional, and group consumption gaps gradually narrowing. Consumption capacity will keep improving, high-quality full employment will make new progress, household income will grow in step with the economy, the social security system will be more optimized and sustainable, and consumers will have stronger spending power, more stable expectations, and greater confidence. [State Council: Launch access and on-road pilot programs for intelligent connected vehicles] The State Council approved the “Expanding Consumption” 15th Five-Year Plan, which notes that high-quality development of digital consumption will be promoted, “AI + consumption” will be deepened, and a digital consumption upgrade campaign will be implemented. The plan calls for expanding digital product consumption, increasing effective supply of new-generation intelligent end-use products such as AI phones and computers, smart wearables, intelligent robots, and desktop 3D printing equipment, accelerating R&D and interconnection of smart security and video care systems, and launching access and on-road pilot programs for intelligent connected vehicles. Digital service consumption will be upgraded by leveraging AI, virtual reality, and other technologies to empower lifestyle services, scenic spots, and neighborhoods, promoting integrated applications of AI with education, healthcare, culture, tourism, sports, and other sectors, and expanding agent application scenarios. Digital content consumption will be innovated by launching more high-quality digital cultural and museum products, strengthening the supply of ultra-high-definition radio, TV, and online audio-visual content, and developing new film formats such as virtual reality movies and LED digital cinemas. US Dollar: The US dollar index gained 0.35% overnight to 101.31, as Fed Governor Waller sent hawkish signals, while the market awaited the US CPI data and remarks by Warsh later today. Fed Governor Waller said on Monday that if future data show inflation remains well above the 2% target, the Fed may need to raise rates “in the near term.” He described current monetary policy as being at a “crossroads,” adding that the direction will be determined by new information such as the CPI report due Tuesday, and that if data take an unfavorable turn, the Fed is at a stage where it must not be “complacent.” Waller stated: “At current policy levels, inflation could still gradually return to the 2% target. But I am equally concerned about the alternative scenario that data in the coming weeks will show inflation staying elevated or even rising further, which would require tighter policy in the near term.” He specifically noted he worries that recent inflation reports suggest price pressures appear to be broadening across the economy, extending beyond the effects of last year’s tariff hikes or recent energy cost increases, possibly reflecting broader, systemic inflation that would demand tighter monetary policy. Waller said, “If core inflation comes in hot again this week, the FOMC will have to consider tightening in the near term. We need to see sustained declines in inflation data over several months to believe that inflation is moving in the right direction.” (Jin10 Data App) Market pricing showed that expectations for at least one rate hike by September had been almost fully priced in, and two hikes by end-March next year had been fully priced. Earlier, Trump announced on social media that the US had reinstated a blockade on Iran and planned to impose a 20% fee on any cargo passing through the Strait of Hormuz. (Jin10 Data App) According to CME FedWatch: the probability of the Fed keeping rates unchanged in July was 58.3%, while the probability of a cumulative 25bp hike stood at 41.7%. For September, the probability of rates staying on hold was 24.9%, a cumulative 25bp hike 51.2%, and a cumulative 50bp hike 23.9%. (Jin10 Data App) Macro Side: Today, data releases will include China’s June trade balance, June import/export y/y growth rates, the US June unadjusted CPI y/y, June seasonally adjusted CPI m/m, June seasonally adjusted core CPI m/m, June unadjusted core CPI y/y, June NFIB Small Business Optimism Index, and the weekly change in ADP employment for the week ended June 27. Crude Oil: At the overnight close, both benchmarks surged sharply—WTI crude jumped 9.23% and Brent crude soared 9.62%, as the US-Iran geopolitical conflict escalated after Trump announced a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz, triggering supply disruption fears. According to CCTV News, Trump said on his social media platform on Monday that the US will impose a 20% fee on all cargo shipped through the Strait of Hormuz, with related procedures and deployment to begin immediately. During the US stock market afternoon session, US Central Command confirmed that US forces will restart the maritime blockade on Iran starting at 4:00 p.m. Eastern Time on Tuesday (4:00 a.m. Beijing time on Wednesday), and international crude gains briefly widened to nearly 10%. Goldman Sachs’s base case forecasts Brent to move sideways in a $75–85 range, based on the logic that Iran effectively controls transit while the US tacitly accepts this reality, with traffic gradually resuming. A move above $100 would require direct strikes on regional energy infrastructure—such as an offshore platform hit over the weekend—or a simultaneous disruption of both the Strait of Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb. Chris Hussey of Goldman Sachs added a long-term perspective, projecting that by 2028 over half of the crude oil originally shipped through the Strait of Hormuz will find alternative pipeline routes, noting that history shows a single-country pipeline in the Middle East can be built in as little as two and a half years, with seven pipelines already under construction. (Wallstreetcn) Russia’s June crude output fell to the lowest level in at least two and a half years, as Ukraine attacked Russian oil infrastructure on an almost daily basis. According to the OPEC monthly report, Russian producers pumped 8.928 million barrels per day (bpd) of crude in June. These figures underscore the enormous pressure on Russia’s oil sector: refiners were forced to cut runs because of Ukrainian drone strikes, leaving Russia to export large volumes of crude. OPEC data based on secondary sources showed that Russia’s June output was 834,000 bpd below its OPEC+ target and 61,000 bpd below the slightly revised May figure. (From the Wallstreetcn App)
Jul 14, 2026 08:38
Against the backdrop of aluminum price premiums being given back and heightened expectations of decline, end-users' willingness to restock will remain suppressed. Industry profit margins are expected to stay low, and competition among enterprises will evolve deeply from "scale expansion" to "cost control and structural optimization."
Jul 11, 2026 18:21July 6, 2026 Despite current headwinds from high U.S. yields and a strong dollar, HSBC believes the gold price still has further upside potential through the end of 2026. While the precious metal is currently trading within a narrow range in the short term—as higher real yields increase the opportunity cost of this non-interest-bearing asset—analysts remain extremely bullish on the long-term investment case. Short-Term Pressure: Raising Liquidity Rather Than a Safe Haven During the recent geopolitical crises in the Middle East and amid rising oil prices, gold behaved less like a traditional safe haven and, at times, moved in tandem with the stock market. In an environment marked by inflation concerns and falling stock markets, investors primarily used the precious metal as a highly liquid hedge. To quickly generate cash during tense market phases or to meet impending margin calls on other investments, gold positions were aggressively sold off. This development was accompanied by previously massively overextended positioning in the futures market. Driven in part by inexperienced speculators, a noticeable correction followed the rapid surge to around $5,400 per ounce at the end of January, as these often leveraged positions had to be hastily unwound. Also noteworthy for commodity investors is the profoundly altered market dynamic: The historical correlation between gold and oil, which was still strongly positive in the 1970s and 1980s, has since decoupled dramatically. Today, this correlation has weakened to a value of around 0.15 or even into negative territory, posing entirely new challenges for diversification in modern portfolios. Structural demand from Asia and ETF inflows provide support The gold price owes its solid foundation to the ongoing need for diversification among institutional investors. Global de-dollarization and geopolitical uncertainties, along with steady ETF inflows, are driving demand, particularly in Asia. On the Shanghai Gold Exchange, this is reflected in a significant price premium of around 20 U.S. dollars. The focus here is less on jewelry or coins and more on large-format bars for the institutional sector. Regulatory changes in China and India now allow large local insurers and asset managers to strategically build up gold positions. This robust demand is complemented by steady purchases by central banks, as underscored by the People’s Bank of China ’s recent acquisitions of an additional 8.1 metric tons. Source: https://goldinvest.de/en/gold-price-forecast-for-2026-why-the-precious-metal-holds-huge-potential-despite-headwinds
Jul 7, 2026 10:45[SMM Morning Meeting Summary: Fundamentals Still Supportive, LME Zinc Center Shifts Higher] Overnight, LME zinc opened at $3,545/mt. In early trading, it briefly dipped to a low of $3,535/mt, then bulls added positions and LME zinc drifted higher throughout the session, touching a high of $3,594/mt near the end of trading, and finally closed higher at $3,579/mt, up $31/mt, a 0.87% gain. Trading volume increased to 13,260 lots, while open interest decreased by 1,268 lots to 269,000 lots.
Jul 7, 2026 09:0102 July 2026 Precious metals ended a record FY25/26 on a soft footing, with the USD gold price falling by close to 15% between March and June, its worst quarterly performance in more than a decade. This price fall—which began at the end of January—was caused by a strengthening U.S. dollar, a sharp rise in bond yields, a complete 180 from the market as it relates to interest rate expectations (with rate hikes in the United States now priced in), liquidity needs caused by the U.S.-Iran war, and a washout of the extreme bullishness and speculation that had crept into the gold and silver market earlier this year. There was also a huge surge in the stock market between March and early June (the S&P 500 was up over 20% during this period) as euphoria took over any tech- or AI-related trades. In the short-term at least, this diminished the safe-haven appeal of precious metals. While the pullback has been painful for some, it was certainly not unexpected—and was in many ways necessary, as long-term bull markets in any asset classes do require periodic consolidations. Importantly, the pullback has likely done its worst in terms of performance and price falls. It has also totally reset sentiment in the precious metal market, with euphoria replaced by fear and/or apathy—typically the kind of market conditions that reward buyers. It is also worth pointing out that despite the sell-off over the past five months, both gold and silver ended the financial year delivering strong gains for Australian investors, with the AUD gold price rising by 16%, while silver was up by over 50%. Take a longer-term view and the results are even more impressive, with the gold price up by more than 100% since June 2023. Silver has rallied by close to 150% over the same period, with the two precious metals strongly outperforming traditional assets over this period. The strong rally over the past three years has been driven by multiple factors, including: Strong Central Bank Buying : Central banks bought 3,000 tonnes of gold between 2003 and 2025, with a further 243 tonnes of buying in Q1 2026. Surveys of central bankers suggest holdings will continue to grow, with gold set to play a more important role as a reserve asset in the decade ahead. ETF Inflows in 2025: ETF holders were substantial net sellers between 2021 and 2024, with net sales each year and a total of 544 tonnes coming out of these products in that period. The tide turned from late 2024 onward, with almost 1,000 tonnes of inflows seen in the last 18 months. Surge in Demand for Retail Bars and Coins : Global bar and coin demand was 42% higher year-on-year in Q1 2026, while buying from this segment of the market topped 1,400 tonnes in 2025 (up 16% on 2024). A longer-term view is even more eye-opening, with gold bar and coin buying from 2023-2025 inclusive topping 3,800 tonnes (more than 30% of all mine output in that period). That level of buying is 13% higher than we saw in the three-year window from 2020-2022 inclusive, a period that included the Covid-19 pandemic. Source: World Gold Council Q1 2026 Gold Demand Trends When you factor in dollar-based spending on bars and coins—with gold prices substantially higher in the 2023-2026 window vs the 2020-2023 window—the result is even more impressive. Outlook For 2026/27 Financial Year ABC Bullion remains optimistic on the outlook for bullion this year, with the huge pullback that we have seen in the last five months setting a base from which the long-term bull market can resume. The challenges posed by overvaluation assets remain unresolved, with the S&P 500 starting this new financial year trading above 40-times cyclically adjusted earnings. Inflation remains at problematic levels, with no easy way to use interest rates to bring it down, given the debt and deficit levels seen across the developed world, headlined by the United States, which will soon clock over USD $40 trillion in debt. I can personally remember when that number was closer to USD $10 trillion when the Global Financial Crisis hit. Heightened geopolitical conflict will be with us for the foreseeable future, creating permanent uncertainty as it relates to energy security and the potential for commodity price shocks. Last but not least, Western investors remain very lightly exposed to genuine safe-haven assets that can help protect their portfolio and provide a source of growth during otherwise challenging periods. Government bonds—which are likely to be a source of return-free risk, rather than risk-free return—will likely continue to drag on investor portfolios, with physical gold the only asset that has the market size, the liquidity and the risk/return profile to fill that gap. With a textbook correction now played out, sentiment readings that have historically been followed by an average 16% gain in the year that followed, and a 100% win-rate (data thanks to Sentiment Trader ), now is a great time to be looking to add more bullion to a portfolio. Until next time. Source: https://www.abcbullion.com/insights/market-updates/gold-set-for-a-strong-rally-as-new-financial-year-begins
Jul 6, 2026 17:23July 5, 2026 As of July 3, 2026, by Florian Grummes Since the end of January, precious metal prices have been in a pronounced correction phase. Following the increasing downward momentum of the past four weeks—which culminated in an escalation and ultimately a clearly recognizable final capitulation—there are now growing signs that precious metal prices are regaining their footing and are on the verge of a major recovery. On the gold market , the break below the key support zone around $4,400 since early June led to an accelerated sell-off , which recently pushed prices down three times to the $3,940–$3,960 range. Apparently, as prices dipped just below $4,000, more buyers returned to the market, allowing the gold price to recover significantly—by as much as $250—over the past two trading days. Short Squeeze Following Price Plunge Silver exhibited an even more pronounced pattern characterized by high volatility : The surprisingly dynamic, yet unsustainable, price surge to $89.37 in the first half of May was followed by an even more severe sell-off. Within six weeks, the price fell sharply, dropping by 29.5% to $55.59. Unlike gold, however, the low of June 24 has not been breached in the past nine days, despite all efforts by the bears. Instead, the short squeeze in the silver market has so far led to a rebound of 13.1%. Early-summer bottom taking shape We have pointed out several times in recent weeks that the combination of capitulation by weak hands (high gold ETF sales), favorable seasonality starting in July, increasingly fearful sentiment, and a completely oversold technical market should bring about an early-summer bottom. Accordingly, the odds are now good that the gold price can recover toward its 50- and 200-day moving averages in the range around $4,500. For the silver price, levels around $70 would at least be conceivable. Market Correction and Further Shift Toward the East In any case, the five-month price decline in precious metals appears to have halted for the time being. While silver has more than halved in price since its high at the end of January, Western bullion banks used the period of weakness to systematically reduce risk in the futures markets: short positions were significantly reduced, and open positions were scaled back. However, the geopolitical cost of this development is considerable. China specifically capitalized on the low prices and accumulated large quantities of physical metal—several hundred metric tons of gold and an estimated up to 2,500 metric tons of silver. This market correction was accompanied by a decline in open interest to its lowest level in decades, as well as additional price losses in the wake of the recent COMEX collapse. The bottom line is that a structural shift is continuing: While the West is cleaning up its books, physical precious metals are increasingly finding their way into strong hands in the East. Summer Rally: Proceed with Caution Depending on how the anticipated summer rally unfolds and how the significantly overbought stock markets—which are vulnerable to a correction, particularly the parabolically rising semiconductor sector—behave in the meantime, even higher price targets for gold and silver are certainly conceivable by fall. For now, however, we do not want to get too far ahead of ourselves; instead, we intend to reassess the situation step by step and, when in doubt, would rather be pleasantly surprised. Silver in USD – Support around $55 has held Silver in U.S. dollars, daily chart as of July 3, 2026. © GOLD.DE Starting from the new all-time high of $121.67 on January 29, 2026, the silver price has so far fallen back in three distinct downward waves to its most recent low of $55.59. This has corrected nearly the entire upward move since the breakout above the $50 mark last fall. However, the broad range between $45 and $55—at the center of which lies the previous decades-long high of $50—should provide extremely robust support and has so far withstood its first stress test. Oversold and Ready for a Rebound Now that silver has returned to this range in a heavily oversold state, the chances of a significant rebound are very good. Ideally, the entire correction over the past five months can be interpreted as a falling wedge, which could set the stage for a strong upward breakout in the medium term. At the same time, the path upward is littered with significant resistance levels. A key factor in the coming weeks will be a push toward the prominent resistance zone around $70. This zone converges the slightly rising 200-day moving average ($69.83), the falling 50-day moving average ($71.32), and a dominant downtrend line. Patience Rather Than Momentum However, an initial bounce off the moving averages is very likely, and silver is likely to need considerably more time to build new, sustainable upward momentum. Recovery with Clear Price Targets In the short term, however, the signals pointing to an impending major recovery clearly predominate. The 38.2% retracement of the downtrend since mid-May, at around $68.50, can be viewed as a minimum target. If, following a temporary pullback, a breakout above the moving averages occurs, price targets in the range of $75 to $78 will come into focus. Overall, there are increasing signs that precious metals have formed a solid bottom following the turmoil of recent weeks and that the summer rally has already begun. Conclusion: Silver – Signs of a Summer Rally Are Emerging Recent price movements in the precious metals markets suggest that the five-month correction phase may have reached its preliminary low. In recent weeks, both gold and silver have exhibited the combination of oversold conditions, extreme sentiment, and capitulation signals that often marks the transition from a downtrend to a recovery phase. In particular, the strong short squeeze of the last two days suggests that in the coming weeks or over the next one to three months, buyers will regain control of price movements . Now that the breakout zone around $55 has held, the silver price has considerable potential for recovery given the overall sharp sell-off. Our first moderate price target for the summer rally is approximately $70. Depending on how the price develops, higher targets are also conceivable. However, the fragile situation surrounding the AI and data center boom, as well as the increasingly precarious outlook for the semiconductor sector, lead us to remain deliberately cautious. Source: https://goldinvest.de/en/silver-and-gold-ahead-of-the-summer-rally-is-the-rally-about-to-begin
Jul 6, 2026 16:32Published:June 29, 2026 1. Review – First Test of the 4,000-USD Mark As feared, the falling 50-day moving average (4,468 USD) has posed an insurmountable hurdle for the price of gold in recent months. Since the last bounce off this moving average on May 12 at $4,773, the downtrend has accelerated significantly. In particular, breaking below the round $4,400 mark led to a sharp sell-off in the first week of June, bringing the price down to $4,023. Although the subsequent recovery was swift, reaching $4,382 within a few days, the Fed’s interest rate decision and the subsequent press conference under new Fed Chair Warsh once again triggered strong selling pressure. Within just seven days, the gold price plummeted to $3,959. The psychologically important $4,000 mark could no longer withstand the selling pressure, and gold fell to its lowest level since early November 2025. 1.1 $4,000 as a Key Level Even though price declines on the downside have recently accelerated significantly, the bears have overall made only slow progress on the downside so far. This week, the low set on March 23 was breached by $140. It took the bears about three months to achieve this! At the same time, however, the broader correction that began in late January remains unquestionably intact. Attention is now focused on the broad support zone around the $4,000 mark. Given the sometimes panicked sentiment of the past few days, a bottoming process typical of early summer is certainly possible here. The erratic and volatile back-and-forth of recent weeks supports this view. However, considerable correction potential has now built up in the stock markets, which is likely to weigh on precious metal prices as well in the event of a significant pullback. For now, patience remains the order of the day. Experience shows that precious metal prices often find a bottom in June or July, from which a substantial summer rally usually begins. For this to happen, however, the gold price would need to hold the $4,000 level and the silver price the $55 level. Alternatively, prices could drop another notch lower first. 2. Chart Analysis: Gold in U.S. Dollars 2.1 Weekly Chart: Bottom Formation in the Coming Days and Weeks Gold in U.S. dollars, weekly chart as of June 27, 2026. Source: Tradingview Since reaching an all-time high of $5,602 at the end of January, the gold market has been in a healthy, yet increasingly complex, correction phase. With the recent low of $3,959, the price has now fallen below the 38.2% Fibonacci retracement level of the previous uptrend (from $1,615 to $5,620). The next relevant retracement levels are at $3,608 (50 %) and $3,138 (61.8 %). This makes it clear that the worst-case scenario we have repeatedly outlined—in the range around $3,500—remains valid and still cannot be ruled out. In the short term, the weekly candles continue to slide southward along the lower weekly Bollinger Band ($3,997). However, one to a maximum of three additional weeks of strong downward pressure are likely to represent the maximum scenario for the bears’ run. Afterward, a bottoming process and the onset of a recovery—or a summer rally—are to be expected. At the same time, after nearly five months of correction and a price decline of over 29%, the weekly stochastic oscillator is clearly in oversold territory. Against this backdrop as well, the remaining downside risk appears significantly limited over the coming days and weeks. Should the correction nevertheless continue in the broader picture, the oscillator would first have to recover. Accordingly, the odds are good that the gold price will form a bottom now or in July in the range between 3,800 and 4,000 USD. Overall, the weekly chart remains bearish but is heavily oversold. A recovery or counter-movement is already on the horizon and could begin in July or August. In the bigger picture, however, the correction could drag on and bring new lows in the fall. 2.2 Daily Chart: New Buy Signal Gold in U.S. dollars, daily chart as of June 27, 2026. Source: Tradingview On a daily basis, the price of gold has lost contact with the still-slowly-rising 200-day moving average (USD 4,474) over the past three weeks. The gap widened at times to nearly 13%, underscoring the currently weak technical condition. Only a return above this closely watched moving average would significantly brighten the chart picture. By the end of the week, however, prices had recovered noticeably and closed the week at $4,088. The recovery that has begun should initially lead to the $4,120 range and, ideally, could extend directly to around $4,220 without any major pullbacks. The positive divergence in the daily stochastic is supportive here, as the indicator no longer fully confirmed the recent low of $3,959. In addition, the oscillator clearly reached its oversold zone. This suggests that a bottoming process may already have begun. Nevertheless, it cannot be ruled out that, in the course of the typical early-summer volatility, there will be further pullbacks before a sustained counter-movement can take hold. Overall, the daily chart could thus be on the verge of a trend reversal. The daily stochastic has turned upward in the oversold zone and offers further upside potential. However, a final pullback below the $4,000 mark down to the area around $3,840 remains possible. 3. Gold Futures Market Structure Commitments of Traders Report for the gold futures contract dated June 23, 2026. Source: Sentimenttrader According to the weekly Commitments of Traders Report (COT Report) published by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), commercial traders held a cumulative short position of 207,563 gold futures contracts at the closing price of $4,331 on June 16. The sharp price decline of the past few weeks has not yet led commercial traders to significantly reduce their short positions. Overall, there have been hardly any notable shifts since the beginning of the year, which supports our thesis that the COMEX is increasingly losing influence. In a long-term comparison, however, the commercial short position remains at a significantly elevated level. Based on data from the past 22 years, the CoT report should therefore continue to be interpreted negatively. 4. Gold Sentiment Sentiment Optix for gold as of June 23, 2026. Source: Sentimenttrader The sharp correction since late January has completely erased the previously highly euphoric sentiment. Since the low in March, sentiment indicators have been moving in the neutral, largely inconclusive range. In the worst-case scenario, the sentiment pendulum could still swing to the opposite extreme of panic and fear. However, this would require significantly lower prices, which we would currently only expect in the context of a severe stock market crash. In summary, sentiment remains in the neutral range with an Optix value of 58. Ideally, the Optix will soon turn upward again above the 50–55 range. Otherwise, the probability of a more severe correction will increase noticeably. 5. Seasonality of Gold Seasonality of the gold price over the last 17 years as of May 1, 2026. Source: Seasonax Typically, after its spring correction, the gold price finds a bottom in June or July and can then recover through September. Given the recent low of $3,959 and the erratic price movements of the past few weeks, such a turning point could already be taking shape in the coming days or weeks. August, in particular, has historically shown strong performance. Overall, the seasonal traffic light is gradually shifting from red to orange and will then turn green starting in mid-July. 6. Macro Update – The facade is still holding, but the foundation is increasingly eroding Share of the “Magnificent 7” in the S&P 500, as of June 25, 2026. Source: The Diary Of A CEO At first glance, the financial markets continue to appear surprisingly robust, but beneath the surface, warning signs are mounting. While the major U.S. indices are trading near their record highs, market breadth has noticeably deteriorated, and numerous former market leaders—such as Oracle, Salesforce, Netflix, Palantir, Microsoft, Meta, and Amazon—have long been in significant correction or bear market phases. For many of these high-flyers of recent years, the technical damage is now considerable. The fact that former growth and AI winners, as well as heavyweights from the megacap segment, have in some cases fallen sharply from their highs shows just how narrow the foundation of the still-ongoing bull market has become. As a result, the technology sector in particular—as the central driver of the boom—has now become highly vulnerable. 6.1 The Limits of the AI Boom Free cash flow forecast for the hyperscalers, as of June 26, 2026. Source: Financelot Even among the AI hyperscalers, the euphoria is beginning to show cracks. Valuations now appear so stretched that the gap between free cash flow and the major indices is unlikely to be sustained indefinitely. At the same time, declines in rental prices for AI GPUs and in data center profit margins are already evident. This reinforces a familiar pattern: either investments decline, revenues catch up significantly, or the market corrects. Based on current evidence, the third scenario appears increasingly plausible. This is because the AI boom thrives not only on technological strength but also on extreme capital investment over a very short period of time. If competitive pressure from China puts additional strain on margins and demand does not grow at the same pace, the hyperscalers will likely have to scale back their spending sooner or later. 6.2 Speculation on Credit Drives the Markets Margin debt as a percentage of GDP at an all-time high, as of June 6, 2026. Source: Hussman Strategic Advisors At the same time, margin debt as a percentage of GDP has reached a new all-time high of over 4%, surpassing even the levels seen in August 2021, March 2000, and July 2007. Historically, such extreme levels have always been followed by sharp pullbacks—not because a chart predicts the future, but because high leverage makes those who have to sell at the wrong moment particularly vulnerable. This is precisely where the real danger lies: as long as prices rise, debt acts as a catalyst. As soon as the market turns, that same leverage becomes a risk factor and amplifies the downward movement. In an environment where market breadth is already crumbling, this can significantly intensify the momentum of a sell-off. 6.3 Space Speculation as a Prime Example Most recently, the hype surrounding SpaceX’s IPO was unprecedented. It is precisely this euphoria and risk appetite in the market—combined with the stock’s extreme valuation—that make it a prime example of a speculative bubble, as the highly ambitious visions of the future, AI fantasies, and space dreams are far ahead of current business realities. An IPO with an implied valuation of around 2 billion USD and a revenue multiple of about 100 appears to be barely supported by fundamentals. As long as the bulk of the narrative rests on Starlink and projections reaching far into the future—such as Mars colonies, asteroid mining, or space-based AI—the risk-reward ratio remains massively skewed and highly unfavorable. 6.4 Late-cycle characteristics are piling up Boom & Bust Cycles, June 26, 2026. Source: Visual Capitalist The narrowing market breadth, combined with a “super-IPO,” is a classic late-cycle characteristic. When only a few mega-caps and rampant speculation on credit are driving the index higher, while a broad segment of the market is already giving way and “smart money” is cashing out via IPOs, the risk of an abrupt revaluation rises significantly! Boom-and-bust cycles are not an exceptional phenomenon, but a recurring feature of developing economies. Markets rarely move in a straight line but instead oscillate between excessive optimism and excessive pessimism. Phases of strong expansion are regularly followed by excesses, rising risks, and finally a correction that resolves imbalances and lays the foundation for the next upswing. 6.5 Semiconductors as a Warning Sign Semiconductor Index, as of June 16, 2026. Source: Creative Planning Given the parabolic rise in semiconductor stocks, history also speaks clearly. To date, there have been only two periods in which the “Semiconductor Index” rose by more than 230% within 14 months: from December 1998 to February 2000 and from April 2025 to the present. The fact that these are precisely the only two such episodes underscores just how extraordinary—and at the same time fragile—such parabolic rises typically are. The warnings from prominent investors are correspondingly stark. Ray Dalio warns of an environment reminiscent of earlier bubble phases, and Jeremy Grantham describes the U.S. stock markets as historically expensive in light of the AI euphoria. 6.6 Fed Under Scrutiny Meanwhile, the Federal Reserve remains wary of premature expectations of monetary easing. At its most recent meeting, it kept key interest rates unchanged but simultaneously raised its inflation forecasts and made it clear that the fight against inflation is not over. Under Kevin Warsh, the central bank is also placing less emphasis on traditional forward guidance. As a result, markets will have to focus more on the data going forward, which is likely to make monetary policy expectations more volatile and reactions in the financial markets more erratic. On top of that, markets often react nervously in the first few months following a change in leadership at the Fed, as monetary policy, reaction patterns, and communication styles must first settle into a new rhythm. It is striking, however, that markets have recently interpreted the Fed’s stance as more restrictive than its projections suggest. While higher interest rates have been priced in for the short term, the Fed’s projections for the coming years continue to point toward falling key interest rates. 6.7 Oil Remains the Pacesetter Oil short positions at an all-time high, as of June 22, 2026. Source: Zerohedge Of course, the oil price remains a key factor for the next phase of monetary policy. The recent easing of tensions in the Persian Gulf and the resumption of shipping traffic through the Strait of Hormuz have put pressure on the crude oil market and dampened inflationary momentum for the time being. Should this trend continue, the recent surge in inflation could potentially prove to be temporary. This would also increase pressure on the central bank to reconsider interest rate cuts later this year. Despite the easing of tensions, however, the geopolitical situation remains extremely fragile. A renewed escalation in the Middle East could drive oil prices significantly higher at any time, thereby abruptly worsening the inflation outlook. Therefore, the current oil oversupply should not be misinterpreted as a sign of a permanently more balanced market. The additional volumes of crude oil that have entered the market in recent weeks, the extremely low inventory levels, the still-restricted transport routes, and the ongoing shortage of refined products point more toward a temporary distortion than toward a sustainable easing of the situation. Added to this are record-high short positions. Consequently, volatility in the oil market will remain high, and another price spike is already on the horizon. 6.8 Shortages of Intermediate Goods Will Feed Through to Consumer Prices At the same time, new bottlenecks are emerging in critical intermediate goods. Sulfur and sulfuric acid, in particular, are becoming a bottleneck for the extraction of numerous industrial metals and, consequently, for the supply of copper, nickel, uranium, cobalt, and rare earth elements. However, this is not only an issue for industry but also for inflation. When intermediate products become scarcer and more expensive, the effects are felt with a delay on investment, production, and ultimately on consumer prices. 6.9 Precious Metals as a Strategic Buffer The bottom line is that signs of a late phase in the cycle are mounting: While the major indices continue to trade near their all-time highs and still appear strong, market breadth, credit excesses, semiconductor euphoria, AI hype, and speculative IPO fantasies are already painting a significantly more fragile picture. Added to this are a cautious central bank, a still-volatile oil market, and rising consumer prices. The environment thus remains vulnerable to abrupt shifts in direction: The facade is still standing, but the foundation is already becoming noticeably more fragile. This is precisely why real assets should continue to play a central role in the portfolio. Although precious metals have been correcting for nearly five months and the weekly chart now shows signs of being oversold, the macroeconomic environment—marked by high debt, inflation, and political uncertainty—continues to support a gradual increase in holdings as a strategic store of value and liquidity buffer. Gold and silver are and will remain important diversifiers and provide the best long-term protection against inflation. 7. Conclusion: Gold – Bottoming Out Ahead of the Summer Rally After more than five months of correction, the gold market is likely gradually ripe for a counter-movement or recovery. The brief dip below the round mark of $4,000 may already have marked the early-summer low. Alternatively, the bears may make one last attempt in the coming weeks to push the gold price below this psychological level. However, given the oversold weekly chart and the now more favorable seasonal trends, the odds point more toward an upside surprise. The upcoming recovery could turn out to be a summer rally, targeting at least the range between $4,400 and $4,500. However, we are not yet convinced of a sustained breakout from the downtrend channel with prices clearly above $4,550; it is quite possible, in fact, that the correction will continue for the time being following a summer rally. This view is also supported by the increasingly fragile environment in the stock markets, which is characterized by dwindling market breadth, high credit leverage, AI hype, and speculative one-off fantasies. Overall, the big picture remains dominated by high uncertainty, as geopolitics, oil prices, inflation, and interest rates can set the markets in motion again at any time, while consumers face increasing price pressure. This is precisely why gold and silver are indispensable strategic building blocks in a world where the facade still stands, but the foundation is increasingly eroding. Source: https://goldinvest.de/en/gold-building-a-bottom-before-the-summer-rally
Jul 5, 2026 21:53[SMM Tin Morning Brief: 400,000 Curse Hard to Break, Wait-and-See Sentiment Heavy in Tin Market Pre-Holiday]
Jul 3, 2026 08:44SMM July 2 News: Fed Chairman Kevin Warsh stated on Wednesday that US inflation upside risks have clearly cooled over the past four weeks, easing market concerns about aggressive rate hikes; he also indicated that no further forward guidance would be released on subsequent interest rate policy, refusing to disclose whether the US Fed needs to consider a rate hike at its next meeting; the US dollar weakened, and precious metals rebounded. As of around 16:09 on July 2, COMEX gold dropped 0.11% to $4,077.9/ounce; SHFE gold main contract rose 1.53% to 890.66 yuan/g; COMEX silver dropped 1.1% to $59.845/ounce; SHFE silver main contract rose 1.91% to 14,650 yuan/kg; silver T+D rose 2.95% to 14,551 yuan/kg. In the precious metals stock market, as of the close on July 2, the precious metals sector rose 4.21%, with individual stocks: Zhaojin Gold and Chifeng Gold hit their daily limit up, while Shanjin International, Xiaocheng Technology, Zhongjin Gold, and Western Gold led the gains. News [Warsh: Inflation Eases Over Past Four Weeks, AI Is Reshaping Economy, Forward Guidance Loses Necessity] On July 1, at the ECB's annual central bank forum in Sintra, Portugal, Warsh again clearly stated that the US Fed would not provide forward guidance on the future interest rate path , hoping that policymakers can engage in thorough discussions based on the latest data at each meeting, rather than previewing the policy direction to the market in advance. He said that US inflation risks had eased over the past four weeks, and the supply expansion brought by AI could profoundly change how the economy operates, with the US at the center of this transformation, but whether AI ultimately leads to inflation or deflation should be judged by the central bank based on data. Warsh said the US Fed is “charting a new path” and will no longer hint at the direction of interest rates in advance as it did in the past. He said: “We will hold our next meeting in four weeks, and I hope we can have a real family-style debate then.” He reiterated that forward guidance is not the right policy in the current economic situation, and the US Fed will continue to base its decisions on the latest economic data in the future, rather than committing to a policy path in advance. This means that the US Fed will rely more on real-time economic data rather than sending policy signals to the market in advance. Spot Market Silver In the spot market: On July 2, the reference average factory price of SMM 1# silver in the morning was 14,558 yuan/kg, up 3.35% from the previous trading day. In the spot market, overall offers remained firm early in the month, but transaction follow-through was slightly weak, and consumption performance fell short of expectations. As silver prices rebounded slightly, downstream wait-and-see sentiment intensified. In Shanghai, morning offers were mainly at TD+5 to +15 yuan/kg. Some smelters quoted on the high side, but actual buying interest was weak, with most deals clustered around TD+10 yuan/kg. In other regions, low-priced cargoes had basically been cleared, while offers in Shenzhen were mostly around TD+5-10 yuan/kg. Today, the market quoted premiums for the SHFE most-traded contract 2608 at a discount of 30 to 20 yuan/kg. Overall, a slight cooling in rate-hike expectations provided some support for precious metals prices. At the start of the month, the spot direction remained unclear. Maintenance at copper plants last month caused a slight disruption on the supply side, and offers generally maintained a slight premium structure. Views From Various Parties Regarding the outlook for precious metals, some institutions’ views are as follows: On July 1, the World Gold Council released the “2026 Mid-Year Outlook for the Global Gold Market.” Looking ahead to H2, gold’s valuation framework indicated that gold will continue to serve as a barometer of the global macro economy, with three main possible scenarios. From current levels, gold prices were broadly in line with market consensus: the market expected the US Fed to raise rates at least once in 2026, most likely in October; the Bank of England, the Bank of Japan, and the European Central Bank were all set to tighten policy; and US Q2 inflation was expected to peak, near $3.9. If there were no major changes in the above environment, gold prices may trade around $4,100/oz within the year, with a fluctuation range of about ±5. If geopolitical or economic conditions deteriorate, or if interest-rate expectations shift, gold is expected to regain its upward momentum; however, only sufficiently strong signals of a global economic slowdown would be likely to drive a breakout to the upside. On the downside, a stronger US dollar, rate hikes exceeding expectations, and a rebound in market risk appetite were the main headwinds for gold prices; if gold prices remain below $4,000/oz, it may trigger further selling. However, based on historical performance, if gold prices fall by more than 10% from current levels, it may trigger “buy-the-dip” demand from long-term investors in multiple regions. State Street Investment Management said that, as the opportunity cost of holding gold and heightened volatility weighed on investor sentiment, bullish gold trades had been weak, and spot gold prices repeatedly tested the $4,000/oz support level. State Street believed that, although gold prices may be more volatile than in 2024-2025, the gold bull-cycle still has upside room, and the US Fed’s hawkish policy shift was expected not to change gold’s post-pandemic structural trend. State Street noted, “Since the US-Iran conflict, China’s retail gold imports have surged, and local premiums have risen in tandem, reflecting tightening fundamentals in China’s gold supply-demand balance.”State Street expects that over the next six to nine months gold prices could rise to the $4,750 to $5,500 per ounce range, with strong support in the $3,750 to $4,000 per ounce area. However, compared with the macro environment from January to February, the probability of gold prices reaching $5,500 to $6,250 per ounce is relatively small. (Zhitong Finance) State Street Investment Management strategists noted in a report that gold prices could reach $5,000 per ounce by early 2027, as the gold bull cycle remains persistent. They believe that as U.S. government debt rises, gold's role as a currency hedge is expected to be supported, while actual demand for gold remains strong. Global gold fund holdings (as a share of global mutual fund and exchange-traded fund assets) currently remain below State Street's target allocation of 3% to 10% for most portfolios. Moreover, they added that a hawkish pivot by the Fed should not alter gold’s structural post-pandemic trend. State Street expects base bullion prices to rise to $4,750 to $5,500 per ounce in the next six to nine months. (Jinshi Data APP) Analysts at Saxo Bank said, "The market has not yet attracted enough buying interest to establish that level as a support level." They also pointed out, "Even though energy prices have pulled back recently, investors still expect the Fed may further tighten monetary policy to combat an inflation rebound, and as a result, gold prices fell 14% in Q2, marking the worst quarterly performance since 2013." (Jinshi Data APP) CICC's latest research report pointed out that gold may have already overpriced rate hike expectations. Fed rate hikes are still not the base case, and the gold market may have overly priced in rate hike expectations, leaving room for a pullback this year. CICC's macro team believes that employment and consumption pressures, along with the expanding financing needs of the U.S. AI economy, may make it difficult for the Fed to materially turn hawkish, and monetary policy may be "hawkish in words but dovish in action." Based on the implied interest rate expectations model from gold prices, it is estimated that the current gold price around $4,000 per ounce has fully priced in three to four rate hikes, exceeding the rate hike expectations priced in by the interest rate futures market. Looking ahead, after the decline in oil prices is further reflected in U.S. short-term inflation data, the gold market's pricing of rate hike expectations may be corrected, and futures market short-term funds may have opportunities to cover short positions. (Jinshi Data APP) Li Xunlei, Deputy Director of the China Chief Economist Forum, pointed out that gold's long-term trend exhibits long bear markets and short bull markets. Since 1971, 30 years have been bear markets and 25 years have been bull markets, but each bull market has seen gains of over fivefold. A bull market typically lasts around 10 years. This gold bull run has now lasted nearly 10 years, with prices tripling during that time, so caution is warranted at this stage. (Jin10 Data App) Deutsche Bank analyst Michael Hsueh said the bank has cut its Q3 gold price forecast by over 20% to $4,300/oz and lowered its Q4 forecast by 17% to $4,800/oz. "Potential investors who would normally provide support are notably absent," he said, pointing to weak demand for exchange-traded funds and reduced buying appetite in some countries. (Jin10 Data App) Macquarie said profit-taking weighed on silver prices last month, and price action is once again driven by macro factors amid rising expectations for US Fed interest rate hikes. Similar to gold, silver prices are expected to move sideways for the rest of the year, then gradually decline into 2027, with inflationary pressures and the likelihood of further US Fed rate hikes limiting upside room. The higher inflation and bond yields, the greater the downward pressure. Silver, in particular, has been more susceptible to a pullback after outperforming gold, driven by bullish sentiment fueled by supply tightens, low inventory, and strong demand. Historically, silver pullbacks tend to be rapid. Macquarie expects silver to trade at $70/oz in Q4 this year and pull back to $65/oz by the end of 2027. (Jin10 Data APP) Recommended reads:
Jul 2, 2026 21:56