Gold ended the week at roughly $4,725 an ounce, nursing a weekly loss of nearly 2.7%, yet the metal’s resilience in the face of conflicting signals has caught the attention of market participants. While geopolitical tensions eased and the Federal Reserve’s leadership outlook shifted, a bearish call from Morgan Stanley underscored the growing divide over where bullion heads next.
A New Chapter for Fed Independence
The most significant catalyst came from Washington, where the US Department of Justice dropped its investigation into Fed Chair Jerome Powell. Analysts had previously baked a so-called “independence discount” into gold prices, reflecting the risk of political interference in monetary policy. The removal of that overhang provided a floor for the metal, even as the US dollar briefly strengthened on the news.
At the same time, speculation intensified around Kevin Warsh as Powell’s eventual successor. Market odds for his confirmation climbed to around 85%. Warsh is viewed as more hawkish than Powell, a development that would typically weigh on gold. Yet the metal held its ground, suggesting that structural factors—chief among them the US national debt, now hovering near $39 trillion—are providing longer-term support.
Geopolitical Detente, But No All-Clear
Progress in US-Iranian talks and an extended ceasefire in the Middle East reduced the geopolitical risk premium that had boosted gold in prior months. However, that premium has not fully evaporated. The Strait of Hormuz remains effectively blocked, and oil prices are holding near $107 a barrel. That keeps inflation expectations elevated, preserving gold’s appeal as a hedging instrument.
Morgan Stanley Cuts Its Forecast
Against this backdrop, Morgan Stanley slashed its second-half gold price target by nearly 10%, to $5,200 an ounce from $5,700. The revision followed a sharp sell-off that saw gold close Friday at around $4,745, down more than 2% on the week. Despite the pullback, the metal still holds a year-to-date gain of roughly 9%.
The bank’s analysts argued that gold is behaving less like a traditional safe haven and more like a rate-sensitive asset. Delayed rate cuts from the Fed are pushing real yields higher, putting pressure on the non-yielding metal. Three factors accelerated the recent decline: Turkey’s central bank sold 52 tonnes of gold in the spring, ETF investors flipped to net sellers—offloading 90 tonnes in March after heavy accumulation—and systematic trend-followers jumped in when the price slipped below its 50-day moving average of $4,883.
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India’s Tale of Two Markets
The demand picture in India offers a revealing split. During the Akshaya Tritiya festival, one of the most important gold-buying occasions of the year, jewelry volumes plunged roughly 30% year-on-year as record prices deterred consumers. Smaller denominations and digital gold gained traction instead.
On the investment side, however, demand for coins and bars rose 17%. The shift underscores gold’s gradual transformation in India from a consumption good into a financial asset—a structural trend that could reshape global demand dynamics over the long term.
The FOMC Meeting Looms
The Federal Open Market Committee meets on April 28–29, with a rate hold in the 3.50%–3.75% range seen as all but certain. The key event will be Powell’s post-meeting press conference, where any hints about the rate path for the remainder of 2026 could set the tone. Technically, gold’s next support sits near $4,715, with resistance around $4,800—just below the current 100-day moving average.
A day after the Fed’s decision, first estimates for US economic growth and the European Central Bank’s rate decision will provide additional direction. If the data cools, gold could find fresh bids. If inflation and growth remain sticky, the case for sustained high rates—and further headwinds for bullion—will only harden.
Wall Street’s year-end targets reflect the uncertainty. J.P. Morgan sees gold at $6,300, BNP Paribas at $5,620 on average, Commerzbank at $5,000, and Macquarie Group at just $4,323. For now, gold is caught between a stabilizing policy backdrop and a market that is increasingly questioning its safe-haven credentials.
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