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Caught between two opposite forces right now. Gold price is hovering around $4,720, stuck in a range between $4,640 and $4,750 for the past week. Technically it's consolidating – no clear breakout yet. But the bigger picture is wild: a major Swiss bank is buying the dip with a $6,000 year-end target, while ETF investors are dumping record amounts of gold. Something's gotta give.
Looking at the charts, traders are basically playing the same game – buy near $4,680-$4,700, sell into $4,750 resistance. The 15-minute setup shows a gap just below $4,710 that could act as a magnet, with real support sitting at $4,640-$4,650. If gold breaks decisively below $4,680, next stop is $4,640-$4,650. Above $4,750 and momentum could shift. But until one of those levels cracks, we're range-trading.
Here's what's interesting though – Union Bancaire Privée (UBP), the Swiss private bank, just started buying again. They'd cut gold exposure from 10% down to 3% after the war started, but now they're rebuilding positions. They're calling for gold price to hit $6,000 by year-end. That's roughly 28% higher from here. Meanwhile, global gold ETFs just saw $4.3 billion in outflows last week – the second-largest weekly exodus on record. Over the past month, ETFs have bled $12.2 billion total. That's the biggest monthly outflow in history.
The war created this weird dynamic where investors are forced-selling gold to cover losses and margin calls instead of treating it as a safe haven. But UBP sees that as temporary dislocation. They're accumulating while retail flows are exiting. Classic smart money vs. passive money divergence.
So the setup is: technical range-bound consolidation with $4,750 as the key breakout level, institutional conviction from UBP supporting higher gold price targets, but historic ETF selling creating downside pressure. If gold price breaks above $4,750 with conviction, $5,000 is probably just weeks away. If it cracks below $4,640, we could see $4,500-$4,400. Either way, volatility stays elevated until one side wins.