#夏日创作营 Gold price may bottom in the third quarter and rebound in the fourth quarter



Looking ahead to the second half of the year, under the combined effects of rising U.S. Treasury real yields, weak physical gold demand, and the fading of geopolitical risk premium, the gold price is expected to show a pattern of first falling and then rising in the second half: in the third quarter, gold prices are likely to continue their choppy downward trend, and the international gold price’s annual low may probe to around $3,700 per ounce, but a rebound from the lows is expected in the fourth quarter.

In terms of monetary attributes, elevated U.S. real Treasury yields have led to redemptions from gold ETFs (exchange-traded funds), which weighs on gold price performance. However, this pressure is expected to ease in the fourth quarter. Over most of history, gold prices have shown a strong negative correlation with medium- and long-term U.S. real Treasury yields. U.S. economic data in the second quarter overall reflected strong resilience. Tightening immigration policy slowed labor supply growth, helping stabilize the labor market, while advances in AI (artificial intelligence) not only boosted investment but also, to a large extent, raised total factor productivity.

On inflation, the U.S. consumer price index (CPI) and core CPI remain high. In the June Federal Reserve policy meeting, the Fed raised its full-year forecasts for personal consumption expenditures (PCE) and core PCE to 3.6% and 3.3%, respectively, far above the 2% policy target. Against the backdrop of solid economic resilience and still-stubborn inflation pressure, expectations for 1 to 2 Fed rate hikes in the second half have been heating up. This not only pushes up yields on short-dated Treasuries, but also keeps medium- and long-term yields such as the 10-year U.S. real yield rising to above 2.3%, the highest level in nearly two years, significantly reducing the cost-effectiveness of allocating to non-yielding gold.

From the perspective of capital flows, as AI-driven technological innovation boosts higher real rates in the U.S., global cross-border capital continues to flow back into the U.S. While global gold ETFs will continue to see large-scale redemptions from March to May 2026, technology ETFs recorded their largest single-month inflow in May in nearly two years, leading to a rebalancing of funds between gold and technology.
Real U.S. rates in the third quarter are still expected to remain elevated, weakening demand for gold investment and suppressing gold price performance. But in the fourth quarter, as commodity prices such as crude oil fall back, U.S. inflation pressure should be alleviated to a certain extent. The Fed’s rate path is also expected to shift toward a more dovish stance, providing support for gold prices.

In terms of physical attributes, the marginal decline in central bank gold purchases combined with soft consumption of gold jewelry is shrinking the support from physical demand. Over the past three years, central banks’ continued large-scale gold purchases have provided stable bottom support for gold prices. But since 2026, there has been a marginal weakening trend, especially with net selling by some emerging-market central banks such as those in Türkiye and Azerbaijan. Based on monthly data, the forecast is that in the second quarter of 2026, central banks’ net gold purchases will decline compared with the past two years; for the full year, net gold purchases will also fall. The author believes this may be because some central banks have already met their goals for diversifying reserves. Meanwhile, under input-driven inflation, selling gold is needed to defend the domestic currency exchange rate. Therefore, in the second half, the official bid side’s support may be less than in 2023–2025. In addition, in a high gold price environment, “substitute” products such as platinum divert demand for gold jewelry. Combined with India’s decision to raise gold import tariffs in May, the probability of weaker gold jewelry demand in the second half is relatively high.

In terms of safe-haven attributes, as the risk premium from geopolitical and trade uncertainties fades, gold’s hedging value shrinks. The Russia-Ukraine negotiation process continues to advance and the U.S.-Iran reach shipping safety consensus. The risk to crude oil transportation through the Strait of Hormuz is expected to ease. Overall, global geopolitical conflicts are entering a long-term stalemate steady state. Conflict-related news can only generate small, single-day pulse-like rebounds in gold prices and cannot produce a panic-driven lift. At the same time, as the U.S. Supreme Court has ruled that Trump-related tariff measures are unconstitutional, tariff risk has been clearly eased. The overall stability of global financial markets has improved, and gold’s hedging value against financial meltdown and credit crises temporarily lacks application scenarios, leading institutions to reduce their precautionary gold allocation ratios.
It is worth noting that in the second half of the year, the U.S. faces midterm elections, and global geopolitical conflicts may continue. If political or geopolitical tensions arise, gold prices may still experience periodical rebounds. $XAUUSD
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#夏日创作营 Gold prices may bottom in the third quarter and rebound in the fourth quarter

Looking ahead to the second half of the year, under the combined effects of rising US Treasury real yields, weak physical gold demand, the fading of geopolitical risk premia, and other factors, it is expected that gold prices will show a pattern of falling first and then rising: in the third quarter, gold prices are likely to continue a choppy downward trend. The international gold price’s annual low may test the $3,700/oz area, but in the fourth quarter, a rebound from the low level is likely.

In terms of monetary attributes, elevated US Treasury real yields have led to redemptions from gold ETFs (exchange-traded funds), which has pressured gold performance. However, this may ease in the fourth quarter. In most historical periods, gold prices have shown a strong negative correlation with medium- to long-term US Treasury real yields. US economic data in the second quarter overall reflected strong resilience. Tightening immigration policy slowed labor supply growth, helping stabilize the labor market. Meanwhile, AI (artificial intelligence) technological progress not only boosted investment, but also largely contributed to improvements in total factor productivity.

On inflation, US CPI and core CPI remain high. At the June Federal Reserve meeting, the Fed raised its full-year forecasts for personal consumption expenditures (PCE) and core PCE to 3.6% and 3.3%, respectively—well above the 2% policy target. Against a backdrop of sufficient economic resilience and still-strong inflation pressure, expectations that the Fed will hike rates 1 to 2 more times in the second half have been building. This has not only pushed up short-end US Treasury yields, but has also kept medium- to long-term tenors—such as 10-year US Treasury real yields—rising to above 2.3%, the highest level in nearly two years. As a result, the cost-effectiveness of holding non–yield-bearing gold declines significantly.

From a capital-flow perspective, as AI-driven technological innovation raises US real rates, global cross-border capital has continued to flow back into the US. During March to May 2026, global gold ETFs have seen sustained large-scale redemptions, while technology-sector ETFs recorded the largest monthly inflow in nearly two years in May. This indicates a rebalancing of flows between gold and technology.

Real rates in the US are expected to remain elevated in the third quarter, weakening demand for gold investment and suppressing gold price performance. But in the fourth quarter, as commodity prices such as crude oil fall back, US inflation pressure should ease somewhat. The Fed’s rate path may shift to a more dovish stance, providing support for gold prices.

In terms of physical attributes, marginal declines in central bank gold buying combined with weak demand for gold jewelry are shrinking the stabilizing force behind physical demand. Over the past three years, sustained large-scale central bank gold purchases provided steady bottom support for gold prices, but since 2026 this momentum has weakened at the margin. In particular, some emerging-market central banks—such as Turkey and Azerbaijan—have shown net sell-offs. Based on monthly data, it is expected that in the second quarter of 2026, central banks’ net gold purchases will decline compared with the prior two years; full-year net gold purchases are also expected to fall. The author believes this may be because some central banks have already completed their targets for diversifying reserves. In addition, under an imported inflation backdrop, they may need to sell gold to defend their currency exchange rates, so the official bid’s bottom-support power in the second half may be weaker than in 2023–2025. Moreover, with gold prices high, alternative products such as platinum divert demand for gold jewelry. In combination with India raising gold import tariffs in May, the probability of weaker gold jewelry demand in the second half is relatively high.

In terms of safe-haven attributes, as risk premia fade amid geopolitical and trade uncertainties, gold’s hedging value diminishes. Negotiations between Russia and Ukraine have continued to progress, and the US and Iran have reached shipping-safety consensus. Risks to crude oil transport through the Strait of Hormuz are expected to ease. With global geopolitical conflicts broadly entering a long-term stalemate steady state, conflict news can only trigger small day-to-day pulse-like rebounds in gold prices and cannot generate a panic-driven surge. At the same time, as the US Supreme Court ruled unconstitutional the measures related to Trump’s tariffs, tariff risk has clearly eased. With overall stability in global financial markets improving, gold’s hedging value against financial collapse and credit crises currently lacks scenarios for meaningful application, and institutions have reduced the proportion of preventive gold allocations.

It is worth noting that in the second half of the year, the US will face midterm elections, and global geopolitical conflicts may persist. If political or geopolitical tensions arise, gold prices may still experience episodic rebounds. $XAUUSD
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