After posting three straight weekly losses, gold just broke below $4,000 an ounce for the first time since November 2025… snapping what had been one of the most powerful runs in the metal’s history.
To understand why this matters, you have to look at where gold came from.
Gold peaked at an all-time high of roughly $5,589 an ounce on January 28, 2026. That was the climax of a rally fueled by dollar weakness, geopolitical fear, surging central bank buying, and genuine inflation anxiety.
From that peak to today’s sub-$4,000 print, gold has lost more than 28% in less than six months.
So, is the gold thesis dead?
Let’s break down what’s behind the correction… why it needs some important context… and what it means for gold stocks.
What’s actually driving the selloff
Three forces are working against gold right now, and they’re all connected.
- The dollar
The U.S. dollar has surged to 13-month highs. And a rising dollar is one of gold’s oldest headwinds. When the dollar strengthens, gold priced in dollars becomes more expensive for foreign buyers, demand softens, and the price falls.
- The Fed
The market is now pricing in the possibility of a rate hike as soon as September, driven by a newly hawkish tone from Fed Chair Kevin Warsh.
When rates rise (or even when the market expects them to), the opportunity cost of holding gold increases. Gold pays no yield. So when Treasuries get more attractive, gold loses some of its appeal.
- Cooling inflation expectations
The U.S.-Iran peace deal drove crude oil sharply lower in mid-June. Lower oil prices relieve one of the biggest inflationary pressure points in the economy. In other words, one of gold’s core arguments—that inflation would stay hot—is weakening in real time.
Put this correction in context
A 28% drop sounds alarming, but let’s zoom out for a second.
Gold gained roughly 65% in 2025 alone. Even after this pullback, the metal is still up dramatically from where it was trading just two years ago. Investors who bought into the gold thesis early are still sitting on substantial gains.
The structural reasons to own gold are all still present:
- U.S. deficits remain enormous.
- Central banks globally are still diversifying away from the dollar.
- And geopolitical uncertainty remains a real concern.
What’s changed is the near-term rate environment. And while that’s a meaningful headwind, it’s not a reason to abandon a thesis that’s still intact at the structural level.
It’s also worth noting the latest analyst expectations.
ING analysts cut their gold price forecasts, now expecting gold to average $4,300 an ounce in Q3 2026 and $4,600 in Q4, down from prior forecasts of $4,850 and $5,000. Goldman Sachs lowered its year-end 2026 target from $5,400 to $4,900.
Notice that even after revising lower, both banks expect gold to trade meaningfully above $4,000 by year-end—a bounce of 15–25% from current levels.
Where to look from here
When gold pulls back hard, gold miners often take a worse beating because their production costs are largely fixed. But the flip side is equally true: when gold recovers, margins expand fast, and stocks can move sharply higher.
Two names worth watching in this space are Newmont (NEM) and Barrick Gold (GOLD), the world’s two largest gold miners.
For broader exposure, the VanEck Gold Miners ETF (GDX) tracks a basket of major producers. It’s down alongside the metal, which is exactly when patient investors have historically found better entry points.
Bottom line
Gold’s break below $4,000 is a real technical and psychological event. The strong dollar and a hawkish Fed are genuine near-term headwinds, and it would be naive to dismiss them.
But the structural case for gold hasn’t gone anywhere. And the analysts who track this market most closely are still calling for a recovery into year-end.
Corrections happen in every bull market. The investors who benefit most are the ones who understand why they’re happening… and keep their eyes on the bigger picture while others panic.
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