Gold market update – April 2026
Insights — May 2026
We share our latest observations on gold markets
All movements are expressed in United States (US) dollar terms, unless otherwise stated.
Key points
- A tentative ceasefire in the Iran conflict saw risk assets stage a blistering rally, rebounding from the indiscriminate sell-off in the prior month. Gold’s status as a safe haven meant that it was likely overlooked for assets with a higher risk profile.
- We believe that gold markets are consolidating in what will turn out to be a much longer uptrend, which creates an entry point for investors to be adding to their allocations.
- The fundamentals of the gold mining sector are compelling and trading at a material discount to fair value and historic norms.
- During April, NO17 Gold declined in line with gold bullion and the universe of gold miners. Please refer to the monthly report for detail specific to the performance of the fund.
Market update
Summary
A tentative ceasefire in the Iran conflict saw risk assets stage a blistering rally, rebounding from the indiscriminate sell-off in the prior month. Gold’s status as a safe haven meant that it was likely overlooked for assets with a higher risk profile.
Gold’s recent behaviour (weakness at a time of heightened geopolitical and macroeconomic risks, which is perceived to be good for gold) has naturally caused some to question gold’s fundamentals.
We observe that since the beginning of the conflict, gold has been more correlated with risk assets which is counter to its behaviour over the long-term (gold bullion has had a correlation to the S&P 500 of greater than 0.5, relative to its 10-20 year average of approximately 0.05).
Our view is that this has been driven by liquidity and technical factors, rather than fundamentals (we articulated this in a letter to our investors during March) and that these factors will normalise following a period of consolidation.
We remain firmly of the view that the structural bull case for gold is intact.
Gold market fundamentals
Central banks
While central banks accounted for 37 tonnes of gross purchases during the month of March (the latest data available) which was considerably above the 21-tonnes-per-month 12-month average, sales by Turkey and Russia (which you will recall we reported last month) of 66 tonnes resulted in net sales of 30 tonnes.
Turkey selling 60 tonnes of gold to support its currency and fund emergency energy imports and Russia sold six tonnes to fund its budget deficit (linked to the war in Ukraine). While nether the volume or value is material, this is an issue that we’re watching closely on the basis that a large sovereign seller for a prolonged period of time would have the potential to weigh down the gold price. If it happened rapidly, it would likely create a short-term dip and test overall sentiment. We believe both of these scenarios would be interesting potential entry points, given our view that the upward trend in gold is likely to persist for a number of years yet.
You will recall that central banks have been an important driver of gold demand and have accounted for over 20% of total demand since the second quarter of 2022 when Russia invaded Ukraine (and Russia’s foreign currency reserves were frozen) which is more than double the post-financial crisis average of approximately 10%.
What is driving central bank demand for gold?
We remain of the view that elevated gold demand from central banks is a secular trend (a robust, longer-term trend). We also see genuine potential for this level of demand to increase materially, driven by an acceleration to the established trend within central banks of reserve diversification (reducing exposure to US Treasuries and the US dollar). There has been a clear and measurable decline in the share of US Treasuries held by central banks since early 2024 which stands in contrast to the post-financial crisis decade (during which foreign official holdings of US Treasuries steadily increased). We believe that President Trump’s unpredictable policies are likely to accelerate this trend, rather than decrease or reverse it.
Further, we believe the higher and higher prices at which central banks have been purchasing gold, especially over the last 18-months, has the potential to create a floor under the gold price, or a dynamic akin to a ‘central bank put’.
How material is central bank demand for gold?
Central banks (other than the US Federal Reserve) hold approximately US$4 trillion of US Treasuries. Substituting just 1% of these holdings for gold over a 12-month period would roughly double the rate of total gold demand growth (we estimate that it would increase total global gold demand by approximately 0.8% relative to gold demand which grew at 0.4% year-over-year in 2024 and 0.8% in 2025). You will recall that gold demand grows very slowly (demand growth has averaged 1% per annum over the last 10-15 years), so even substituting a relatively small amount of US Treasuries for gold would stand to have a significant impact on the price of gold.
What if central banks substitute US Treasuries for gold more rapidly?
The amount of gold required to substitute 10% of non-US central bank holdings of US Treasuries is equivalent to two-thirds of the gold presently held in gold bullion ETFs globally (approximately 4,000 tonnes valued at approximately US$600 billion) or equivalent to approximately 60% of total annual demand.
What is driving aversion to US Treasuries?
It is no longer certain that US Treasuries are the lowest-risk, highly liquid asset class. The unprecedented amount of debt at federal level (nearly US$39 trillion) in the US combined with eye watering federal government budget deficits (the 2026 budget deficit is projected at US$1.9 trillion) are undermining confidence in US Treasuries and the US dollar.
The low confidence in US Treasuries (and absence of safe haven characteristics) was evident during the recent ‘Liberation Day’ market stress when 10-year US Treasury yields spiked sharply by 64 basis points within just two days, marking one of the largest two-day increases on record.
Commercial banks
While it hasn’t received any attention in the gold market or the mainstream media, we believe it is plausible that commercial banks have been purchasing gold in material quantities as part of their regulatory reserves under Basel III, in response to the rising risk profile of US Treasuries (which account for the largest share of commercial bank reserves).
This only recently became feasible following the framework’s explicit upgrade of gold bullion (in ‘allocated’ physical form) to ‘Tier 1 High-Quality Liquid Asset’ status in July 2025, which allows banks to count it at 100% market value toward core capital and liquidity requirements (prior to July 2025, physical gold bullion held by banks under Basel III was generally classified as a Tier 3 asset and was valued at only 50% of its market value for reserves or liquidity requirements).
Estimates of the value of US Treasuries held by commercial banks globally varies, however the consensus is in the order of US$3-5 trillion. The impact on gold demand under a scenario whereby commercial banks diversify their reserves, by reducing their holdings of US Treasuries, would be similar to our estimates for central banks (refer above).
Gold-backed ETFs
You will recall that gold bullion ETFs are the most dynamic variable in the gold market on the basis that their behaviour is cyclical and can contribute materially to both demand and supply (depending on whether they are in an accumulation or liquidation cycle). The key driver of these cycles are real yields (therefore the US interest rate cycle and inflation expectations) and the US dollar (on the basis that gold is priced in US dollars, so the gold price typically moves inversely to the dollar’s value).
April saw net inflows to gold bullion ETFs of 45.2 tonnes, rebounding from the largest monthly outflow by volume since September 2022 (which we attributed the to the above-mentioned liquidity and technical factors, rather than fundamentals) which indicates that private investors bought the dip and we interpret this as a positive indicator. There is no change to our view that ETFs remain in an accumulation cycle which we expect to be a material tailwind over the next 1-2 years at least.
Ultimately, we believe gold demand from ETFs is a potential catalyst for the gold price to be driven considerably higher than present levels. We reflect on the immaterial penetration of gold as an asset class in exchange-traded investment markets – the market capitalisation of all the gold bullion contained in ETFs globally is approximately US$600 billion (less than 15% of Nvidia’s market capitalisation).
While total ETF gold holdings have volumetrically surpassed the highs achieved during the COVID-19 pandemic (4,139 tonnes relative to 3,929 tonnes in November 2020), this volume is immaterial in the context of the total physical gold market, accounting for less than 2% of all above-ground gold in existence in its various forms. We see considerable potential for the demand for gold from exchange-traded investment markets to increase substantially.
We reflect that gold bullion is the only major commodity or asset class which has never been sought after by the US consumer (the world’s most influential demographic). In fact, it was actually illegal to own gold in the US between 1934 and 1974. Bank of America and Goldman Sachs estimate that on average US investors have only a negligible exposure to gold. We see considerable scope for investors globally to materially increase their allocation to gold in the present environment.
Gold bullion
The gold price fell 1.1% in April, consolidating sideways following its drawn-down in March (gold’s largest monthly decline since June 2013).
Since its all-time high in late January of US$5,589 per ounce, as of the end of April, gold had sold off to US$4,618 per ounce, a decline of over 15% and gold miners were hit even harder with the universe falling over 20%. This has naturally caused some to question gold’s fundamentals.
We observe that since the beginning of the conflict, gold has been more correlated with risk assets which is counter to its behaviour over the long-term (gold bullion has had a correlation to the S&P 500 of greater than 0.5, relative to its 10-20 year average of approximately 0.05).
Our view is that this has been driven by liquidity and technical factors (rather than fundamentals, which we articulated in a letter to our investors during March) which will normalise following a period of consolidation.
We remain firmly of the view that the structural bull case for gold is intact.
Gold’s recent experience has been no different to equally unexpected episodes in 2008 and 2020 when gold demonstrated its sensitivity to a market liquidity squeeze. Gold’s fundamentals ultimately prevailed and the gold price rallied by 167% and 40% respectively following the lows in those episodes.
Technical observations
Momentum, as measured by the 14-day relative strength indicator (RSI) ended the month on the neutral side of oversold (a reading of 43), rebounding from oversold levels during the month (a low of 27 on 23 March). The key resistance level we’re monitoring on the downside is US$4,300 per ounce (corresponding with the 200-day moving average).
Gold futures
Net speculative positioning in gold (non-commercial positions) ended April lower month-over-month. Non-commercial speculative positioning remains below the lows of 2025 and below the levels observed for the majority of 2024 which provides considerable scope for the level of speculative positioning to be a supportive factor for the gold price going forward.
Outlook for the gold price
Looking forward, gold’s fundamentals remain strong, driven by tight supply and its key structural demand driver which underpins our outlook for gold to remain in a multi-year uptrend: Global reserve asset diversification – the continued diversification away from US financial assets as the primary reserve asset appears inevitable. Gold is one of the main beneficiaries of this established trend and we see considerable potential for acceleration.
Looking at the big picture, it is critical to appreciate that we haven’t seen a demand environment quite like this ever before – the last major uptrend from 2001-2011 was driven by ETFs accumulating gold for the first time combined with gold miners closing out hedge books (miners had sold their future production in the 1990s and they bought it back in the 2000s), while central banks were actually selling gold. Today’s strong demand, combined with a tight supply side (gold mining accounts for approximately three-quarters of total gold supply) creates a strong fundamental basis for higher gold prices. On our base case demand scenario, we assume the period of supply rebalancing will last 5-6-years and drive the gold price considerably higher than present levels.
While gold is still trading near to all-time-high prices (in both nominal and real terms), our analysis of the gold mining industry and the supply cost curve and where we believe we are in the cycle, indicates that incremental increases in demand will drive the gold price materially higher (the equilibrium price is being driven up the steep tail of the cost curve).
Gold mining has experienced under-investment for more than a decade (since the end of the last cycle in 2011) and this period of neglect means the industry will be less able to respond quickly to demand shocks. We anticipate that the mine supply of gold will tighten further in the short-to-medium term, as some producers pursue a ‘mine life over value’ strategy by lowering cut-off grades (this is a characteristic cyclical reaction) which is fundamentally supportive of a higher gold price by both reducing supply and steepening the cost curve.
Gold mining equities
Gold miners (GDM Index -2.6%) consolidated in line with gold bullion. We maintain our view that the ‘gold miners re-rate trade’ that we have been writing about since mid-2024 is underway (where the very strong fundamentals of gold miners begins to be recognised by markets, attracting capital flows which drive valuation multiples materially higher towards fair value).
Markets are yet to recognise the strong fundamentals of many gold miners (i.e. EBITDA margins comparable to Nvidia, un-levered balance sheets, trading on valuation multiples below fair value and historic norms while providing leverage to higher gold prices).
Outlook for gold mining equities
You will recall that the key factor driving the performance of gold mining equities is each company’s operating profit margin, which typically expands (and contracts) by roughly double the movement in the gold price. Gold miners are therefore described as ‘leveraged’ to the gold price.
We expect gold miners to outperform gold bullion and global equities, driven by their profit margins expanding by more than the movement of the gold price. We also expect valuation multiples on gold miners to expand as they normalise from cyclically depressed levels.
It is noteworthy that in recent years, gold mining stocks have not been exhibiting this characteristic relationship to the gold price. For example, during 2024, the gold price strengthened by 26.7%, whereas the index of gold mining stocks only appreciated by 9.2%. Going further back, since the peak of the last gold cycle in August 2011, the gold bullion price has appreciated 143.4% while the gold miners index has only risen 37.3%. In 2011, we estimate that the top-5 gold producers by market capitalisation were trading on 29 times one-year forward price-to-free cashflow (relative to fair value at approximately 20-22 times) whereas the same cohort is trading on less than 10 times presently.
The recent strengthening of the gold price (and therefore expansion of gold mining profit margins) has not been reflected in stock prices. We believe this is on account of the fact that it has been easy to ignore the sector for the last 10-12 years, since the peak of the last cycle and a run of disappointments. Gold miners have remained off the radar for the majority of investors on the basis that they are immaterial within global equity indices, technically complex, deeply cyclical, and have been overshadowed by miners exposed to more exciting metals such as copper, lithium, rare earths and uranium, etc.
We believe one of the factors contributing to the dislocation is the apparent divergent forecasts for the gold price between gold bullion traders and gold mining equities analysts which we have examined in a separate report. When it comes to forecasting the gold price, we encourage investors to consider the forecasts from the banks which actually trade gold bullion (and are therefore qualified to opine on it). This cohort of banks are upgrading forecasts to levels much higher than the current spot price on a 12-month view.
We see this disconnect as temporary and a significant opportunity which markets are only just beginning to recognise. We believe a normalisation (a mean reversion of valuation multiples on gold miners back to long term norms) is inevitable driven by the bull market in gold bullion and equity investors seeking gold mining equities’ strong fundamentals and compelling valuations.