Gold fell below $4,100 per troy ounce on July 8, dropping 2.3% as escalating US-Iran tensions revived inflation concerns and pushed traders to price in a higher probability of a Federal Reserve rate hike.
"The geopolitical risk premium is being overwhelmed by the monetary policy response — markets see higher oil prices feeding into inflation, which forces the Fed to stay hawkish," said Omar Tariq, a commodities strategist.
The decline extends a correction from the all-time high of $5,300 reached in January 2026, leaving the metal down about 22% from its peak. COMEX gold futures volume surged 40% above the 20-day average as stop-loss orders triggered below the key $4,100 level, according to exchange data.
The selloff comes despite sustained central bank buying — institutions purchased 474 tonnes in the first quarter, the second-highest quarterly total on record, according to the World Gold Council. The next catalyst for gold will be the July 29-30 FOMC meeting, where rate expectations will be tested against incoming inflation data.
Central Bank Demand Remains a Structural Backstop
Central banks bought 474 tonnes of gold in Q1 2026, and nearly 90% of institutions surveyed said they plan to add to reserves over the next 12 months, according to the World Gold Council's latest central bank survey. The structural shift away from US dollar reserves — accelerated by the 2022 freeze of Russia's dollar assets — continues to underpin physical demand even as speculative positions unwind.
ETF Outflows Signal Weak Hands Exiting
Gold ETF holdings declined by 65 metric tons from the end of 2025 through Q1 2026, as speculative investors liquidated positions built during last year's rally. Total investment demand surged to 2,175 tonnes in 2025 from 1,185 tonnes in 2024, according to World Gold Council data, creating a large base of holders susceptible to geopolitical shocks.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.