Gold prices retreat: what additional catalysts are needed to return to the $5,000 mark?

After the gold price once approached the $5,000 mark, the market enthusiasm significantly cooled on Wednesday afternoon due to an unexpected shift in the geopolitical situation.

Trump Policy’s “U-turn” Shortly after the gold price hit an intraday record high of $4,891.10, U.S. President Trump announced a major development: the United States has reached a preliminary framework with NATO Secretary General Stoltenberg regarding an agreement on Greenland. Subsequently, Trump stated that he would not impose tariffs on Europe as previously threatened. This series of negative safe-haven signals directly caused sharp market volatility.

The so-called “TACO” moment The financial markets quickly reacted to this shift, with traders calling it the “TACO” moment—meaning “Trump Always Chickens Out.” As this expectation spread, U.S. stocks rebounded sharply, Treasury yields rose, and the dollar strengthened. Against this backdrop, investors began to withdraw funds from safe-haven assets like gold and reallocate into equities.

Gold’s resilience and current status Despite the price retreat, gold has demonstrated strong resilience, remaining above $4,800. Analysts point out that the pricing logic of gold is undergoing a fundamental change.

Dilin Wu, Senior Market Analyst at XS.com, stated in his report: “Gold has shifted from a purely policy-driven asset to a ‘safe-haven asset.’ Its primary role now is to hedge risks arising from the credit system, monetary system, and the increasingly turbulent geopolitical order.”

The path to $5,000 Although short-term pressures on gold prices have arisen due to easing geopolitical tensions (such as the withdrawal of tariff threats), analysts generally believe that a return to and stabilization above the $5,000 level requires deeper, more structural drivers:

  1. Structural low-interest-rate environment: Only when real interest rates remain low does gold, which bears no interest, become more attractive.
  2. Global de-dollarization wave: Central banks worldwide continue to buy gold to reduce dependence on the dollar.
  3. Long-term geopolitical fragmentation: Even if some agreements are reached in the short term, long-term uncertainties in the global landscape remain the foundation for gold prices.
  4. Strong demand from institutional investors: Ongoing buying from financial institutions and central banks worldwide.

Although the “TACO” moment has hindered gold’s progress toward $5,000, it has not changed its status as the ultimate global hedge asset.

#黄金 #Trump #地缘政治#TACO

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