All Signs Point to Gold Price Strength
(www.investorideas.com Newswire)
Inflation, higher interest rates and a strong dollar are bad for gold prices. On the other hand, war, geopolitical stress, bad job reports and stagflation are good for gold.
The consensus on gold prices for 2026 is cautiously bullish, with many analysts expecting the precious metal to consolidate at higher levels.
I believe gold will see resistance at $5,000, with $100-200 moves on either side for the short term at least.
Despite the opposing forces of high interest rates (negative for gold) and severe geopolitical stress (positive for gold), the prevailing view is that structural drivers such as central bank buying, de-dollarization, persistent inflation/ stagflation, interest rate cuts and safe-haven demand will outweigh short-term headwinds.
Central bank buying
Emerging-market central banks continue to buy gold to diversify away from the US dollar, providing a solid floor for the price.
Net central bank gold demand increased to 230 tonnes in the fourth quarter of 2025, up 6% from 218t in the previous quarter. This strong performance concluded a year marked by durable buying activity, even as gold prices reached record highs, states the World Gold Council.
Twenty-two institutions reported an increase in their gold reserves of around a tonne or more during the year; seven were responsible for the bulk of the gold buying: the National Bank of Poland (+102t), the National Bank of Kazakhstan (+57t), the Central Bank of Brazil (+43t), the State Oil Fund of Azerbaijan (+38t), the Central Bank of Turkey and the People’s Bank of China (+27t), and the Czech National Bank (+20t).
Geopolitical risk
Ongoing conflicts and the “de-dollarization” trend are viewed as long-term, irreversible changes that favor hard assets. The war in Ukraine entered its fourth year this past February; and the threat of China invading Taiwan is back on people’s radar due to the US potentially running out of defensive missiles in the war with Iran that started on Feb. 28. There is also ongoing strategic competition focusing on trade, semiconductors and security, creating high risk for conflict.
The US risks running out of missiles in war with Iran — Richard Mills
Yemen’s Houthi rebels launched multiple missile and drone attacks targeting Israel throughout 2025; North Korea continues to provoke with missile launches; and there is increased volatility in Latin America, particularly with developments in Venezuela.
Stagflation
The war between Iran and the United States/ Israel is worrying investors that it could cause the return of 1970s-style stagflation.
Stagflation occurs when the inflation rate and unemployment remains stubbornly high, and economic growth slows.
If inflation stays high while growth slows, gold’s role as a hedge is expected to shine.
As we’ve previously written, gold does well in stagflationary periods and outperforms equities
during recessions.
In six of the last eight recessions,
gold outperformed the S&P 500 by 37% on average.
Brent
crude has jumped from $67.13 on Feb. 17 to the current $103.86 a
barrel, a gain of 54% in less than a month, as the Strait of Hormuz
remains closed to shipping. The new Iranian leadership has vowed to
keep the key waterway blocked, causing oil prices to spike.
Capital Economics says a useful rule of thumb is that a 5% rise in
oil prices adds about 0.1% to developed-market inflation.
High
oil prices also dampen economic growth, with the IMF estimating that
for every 10% rise in oil prices, global economic output decreases
by 0.1 to 0.2%.
The multiplier effects of closing the
Hormuz Strait are going to be felt across the globe. It’s not
only oil that transits the strait (about 20 million barrels a day),
but LNG, distillates like gasoline and jet fuel, sulfur, fertilizer
and aluminum. There is also helium, used in high-tech manufacturing
processes to produce semiconductors.
All of these
commodities are trapped, and their prices are rising fast.
The
case for stagflation in the US is bolstered by events at home.
The
economy lost 92,000 jobs in February, while the unemployment rate
ticked up to 4.4%.
Data released this week showed
that CPI inflation in February was sticky, rising 0.3% over January and 2.4%
year over year. Of course, Wednesday’s inflation print
didn’t capture the effects of the oil price surge this month.
The March figure is likely to be considerably higher.
The
Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) price index — the
Fed’s preferred inflation gauge — increased 0.3% in
January after rising 0.4% in December, the Bureau of Economic
Analysis (BEA) said Friday.
US Treasury yields are rising
with oil prices, as traders assess the war’s impact on inflation. On Friday morning the 10-year Treasury had climbed 5 basis points
to 4.25% while the 30-year added more than 2 bp to 4.879%.
US manufacturing employment continues to shrink, with the sector
losing another 12,000 jobs in February, to 12.57 million, the lowest
since January 2022.
Manufacturing employment has
contracted in 23 of the last 25 months, the longest losing streak
since the financial crisis.
Expect the Iran war to make
the manufacturing recession even worse, because higher energy costs
will force factories to cut even more jobs.
Speaking of
making things worse, Michael Pento, president of Pento
Strategies, penned a column in which he stated that The battered US consumer, who was already suffering an
affordability problem, is now having to deal with much higher
energy prices. Higher energy prices hurt the consumer in two ways.
First, the roughly $350 worth of fiscal stimulus per taxpayer from
the OBBB [One Big Beautiful Bill Act] is now going to be used to
pay utility and gas bills instead of increased discretionary
spending. And secondly, the higher inflation caused by spiking
energy prices reduces the Fed’s ability to cut interest
rates. In other words, the highly anticipated and well-touted
fiscal and monetary boost for the economy in 2026 is being
cancelled.
Other key points made by Pento:
- On top of this, we have an economy that is no longer creating net new jobs.
- Meanwhile, the credit markets continue to fracture. BlackRock froze $1.2 billion in withdrawal requests from its $26 billion private credit fund.
- The Fed printed $15 billion last week alone just to keep stock prices elevated.
- There should still be a more lasting premium in energy prices even after the war officially ends. This is because the energy dynamic has changed. Much like US sanctions and the confiscation of foreign assets discouraged countries from holding dollars and towards hoarding gold, energy may now be hoarded due to supply fears caused by US aggression in the Gulf.
Interest rate cuts
Rate cuts from the Federal Reserve, as the US labor market keeps
softening, are expected to reduce the opportunity cost of holding
gold.
The Fed will be keeping a close eye on
inflation to decide whether to lower or raise rates. If inflation
ticks higher, the central bank may elect to raise rates, which would
be bad for stocks, bonds, borrowers and the overall economy, which
runs on cheap credit.
The global economy is facing
increased risks of “stagflation lite” in 2026,
characterized by high inflation, slowing growth, and a softening,
but not cracking, labor market. While not universally considered a
full-blown crisis yet, conditions in early 2026 show that rising
inflation, driven in part by energy costs and geopolitical tensions,
is colliding with tepid economic growth, creating a challenging
environment for central banks.
Central banks around the world are having to balance the need to curb inflation, by raising interest rates, without causing a severe recession.
The war’s knock-on inflationary effects could dash the
market’s expectation of at least two interest rate cuts this
year in the US.
In fact, in a dramatic reversal of
fortune, they could even rise.
The key questions for us
at AOTH is how long the Hormuz Strait remains closed and if the
Houthis, Iran’s proxies in Yemen, decide to try and close the
Bab el-Mandeb Strait.
The Straits of Hormuz and Bab el-Mandeb are critical global chokepoints, together handling a significant portion of global energy and goods. The Strait of Hormuz transports 20 to 30% of global seaborne oil and one-third of liquefied natural gas (LNG), while the Bab el-Mandeb facilitates a major share of trade through the Suez Canal, handling roughly 30% of global oil and 40% of dry goods.
The Iran war and stagflation — Richard Mills
Yahoo Finance reports Fed officials are expected to hold interest rates steady when they meet later this month, as they did at their gathering in January.
Trade war
Before the US and Israel attacked Iran, gold was enjoying
considerable safe-haven demand owing to the economic disorder caused
by the Trump administration’s tariffs. This is expected to
continue.
Those hoping that the Supreme Court decision
striking them down would end the protectionist trade policy will be
disappointed.
Trump has found another way to impose
import duties, and that is by launching investigations under Section
301 of the Trade Act of 1974.
The administration
has reportedly expanded its trade investigations to 60 countries,
including Canada.
It also implemented a worldwide 10% levy but that can
only stay in place for 150 days without Congressional approval.
InvestorDaily quotes Betashares’ chief economist David Bassanese in saying
that tariffs and tighter immigration policy have weighed on both
labor demand and labor supply.
“Higher US tariffs have both added to economic uncertainty
and consumer prices while reducing corporate profits. The
crackdown on illegal immigration – estimated to account for
10 per cent of the workforce – has also reduced labour
supply,” he said.
Bassanese said these policies
represented negative supply shocks that risked slowing economic
growth while simultaneously lifting inflation.
“Raising
tariffs while restricting the supply of labour are just the first
two of the negative supply shocks US President Trump has imposed
on the world’s leading economy. Such negative supply shocks
are stagflationary in that they dampen economic activity while
also raising prices,” he said.
Gold bucks a trend
Gold observers can, and should, ask a legitimate question: How can
gold go up when the US dollar is climbing — as it infallibly
does during energy crises — and Treasury yields are
increasing?
Remember what I said at the top: inflation,
higher interest rates and a strong dollar are bad for gold
prices.
Yet we have a historical precedent that bucks
this trend. Between 2023 and 2025, driven by massive central bank
purchases, geopolitical risks, and distrust in monetary policy, gold
broke its traditional inverse correlation to achieve record highs
despite the headwinds of a strong dollar and rising US Treasury
yields.
The charts below prove this apparent
anomaly.
Source: Trading Economics
According to Institutional Investor and MarketWatch,
While a stronger dollar (which makes gold more
expensive in other currencies) and higher yields (which increase the
opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold) typically create an
“inverse” relationship, this “new normal”
shows that other, more powerful drivers can dominate.
Conclusion
Gold hit an all-time high of $5,370 on Jan. 28. Although it has
fallen around $300 since then, the bull market that started in early
2024 is arguably still intact.
Factors feeding into the
bull include geopolitical risk, in frightening abundance right now;
the ongoing trade war; central bank buying and de-dollarization; the
prospect of higher interest rates that will increase the servicing
costs on the nearly $39 trillion national debt; and stagflation
— an ugly combination of high unemployment, high inflation and
low economic growth.
Unless the war with Iran ends soon,
stagflation will soon be stalking global economies. Stagflation is
bad for stocks, bonds, consumers and manufacturers. The only thing
that it’s good for, history has shown, is gold.
Richard (Rick) Mills
aheadoftheherd.com
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