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Regarding the future trends of gold and crude oil, the current consensus among mainstream institutions is: both are primarily driven by Middle East geopolitical developments, but their short-term and long-term logic differ.
In simple terms, crude oil is more affected by supply shocks in the short term, with the long-term center expected to shift upward; gold is under pressure in the short term due to a strengthening dollar, but its long-term outlook remains solid.
🛢️ Crude Oil: Short-term premium high, long-term center rising
Recently, oil prices have been strong mainly due to geopolitical risks, with many institutions raising their price forecasts.
· Short-term trend (1-3 months): Trading at high levels with increased volatility. The key focus is the transportation situation through the Strait of Hormuz. Goldman Sachs predicts that if shipping through the strait remains restricted, Brent crude oil prices could reach $110 per barrel by March-April 2026. The market needs to maintain high premiums to hedge against potential supply shortages.
· Long-term outlook (Full year 2026 and beyond): The price center is significantly elevated. Even if geopolitical conflicts ease, Goldman Sachs has raised its full-year average price forecast, expecting Brent crude to average $85 per barrel in 2026, well above previous estimates, and believes high oil prices could persist long-term.
· Core logic: Besides immediate risks, the market is reassessing the risk of highly concentrated remaining oil production capacity. This concern may prompt countries to increase strategic petroleum reserves, providing long-term structural support for oil prices.
✨ Gold: Deep correction in the short term, a bull market expected in the long term
Gold prices recently broke the usual “safe haven rally” pattern, mainly because their short-term logic has been suppressed by oil prices.
· Short-term trend (Currently): High volatility with downward pressure. The main suppressors are twofold: first, a sharp rise in oil prices boosts inflation expectations, leading to a cooling of Fed rate cut expectations and a stronger dollar, which directly hurts gold; second, profit-taking from previous gains, combined with liquidity crunches caused by stock market turbulence, has led to gold being sold off for cash. Technically, gold is still in a bottoming process; Guojin Securities points out that $4,300 and $3,900–$4,000 are key support levels.
· Long-term outlook (More than 6 months): The upward foundation remains, and a new wave of bullish momentum may begin. Most institutions believe this sharp decline is a deep correction within a bull market.
· Core logic: The long-term bullish case for gold remains intact. First, weakening dollar credit and prolonged geopolitical conflicts are eroding the “petrodollar” system, and the global de-dollarization trend in central bank gold purchases will continue. Second, recession risks and high oil prices could accelerate the US economy’s shift from “inflation” to “stagflation” or even recession, with expectations of the Fed resuming easing policies acting as a strong catalyst for gold price rebounds.
📊 Summary and Risks
| Asset | Short-term dominant logic | Short-term outlook | Long-term core logic | Long-term outlook |
|---------|------------------------------|---------------------|----------------------|------------------|
| Crude Oil | Supply disruption risks from geopolitical conflicts | Trading at high levels, forecast raised | Reassessment of remaining capacity risks, inventory gaps | Center rising, possibly maintaining above $80 per barrel |
| Gold | Inflation driven by oil prices and dollar strength expectations | Under pressure, volatile correction phase | Weakening dollar credit, central bank gold buying, recession expectations | Still room to rise, potential resumption of bull market |
Key risk points: All forecasts are based on highly unstable geopolitical conditions.
· For crude oil: If US-Iran tensions suddenly ease, risk premiums will quickly fall, leading to a rapid decline in oil prices.
· For gold: If the Fed unexpectedly adopts a more hawkish stance due to inflation pressures, gold could face further valuation pressure.
From a trading perspective, short-term market sentiment remains risk-averse with high volatility. If you want to know specific trading strategies or position management advice in this highly volatile environment, feel free to ask me. #创作者冲榜