is grinding through a third consecutive losing session and the tape is uglier than the headline numbers suggest. Spot prices sit between $4,510 and $4,570 across data feeds, with the most recent prints clustering near $4,556 to $4,559 and the U.S. session pushing toward fresh April lows beneath $4,500. The intraday drop registered another 1.3% lower, the weekly decline has now stretched to 2%, and slipped 1% to trade below $4,600 an ounce. The pullback drags bullion back to levels last visited at the close of March, a month that booked the worst monthly performance for the metal since 2008 and erased a meaningful portion of the year-to-date gains that had peaked at over $5,600 in late January. Across the entire correction, gold has surrendered more than half of those YTD gains, sitting roughly 19% beneath its all-time high and trading into a confluence of macro headwinds that no chart pattern overrides. The setup is brutal: is up over 5% on the Iran blockade extension, the Federal Reserve is hours from delivering a third consecutive policy hold at 3.50% to 3.75%, Treasury yields are pushing higher with {{23705|the 10-year (^TNX)}} at 4.40% and {{23706|the 30-year (^TYX)}} at 4.979% — one bad print from breaking the 5% line that has acted as a hard ceiling three separate times across the past three years. CME FedWatch prices today’s hold at 99.5%, and the same tool now shows the Fed keeping rates at current levels through year-end. That removes any dovish catalyst the gold complex was banking on for a near-term recovery. The story playing out on the four-hour candles is not a top forming — it is a structural buy zone getting tested aggressively into a binary Powell press conference at 14:30 ET that decides whether the metal stabilizes at $4,500 or unwinds toward $4,441 and the $4,376 shelf below it.
The supply-demand structure underneath the spot price is materially stronger than the chart action implies, and that gap is the single most important fact for anyone running a longer-horizon allocation. The World Gold Council’s Q1 2026 report landed today and the numbers are the kind that get filed under structural regime-change rather than cyclical noise. Total quarterly gold demand including OTC printed at 1,231 tonnes, up 2% year-over-year, and the dollar value of that demand exploded 74% to a record $193 billion thanks to the price-driven optical multiplier. The LBMA (PM) gold benchmark set a new quarterly average record of $4,873 an ounce, with the historic $5,405 high hit in January before the correction took hold. Gold returned 6% across the quarter even with the late-March selloff baked in. Bar and coin demand alone landed at 474 tonnes, a 42% year-over-year surge and the second-highest quarterly print on record, with Asian buyers absorbing the majority of the flow. Bars specifically jumped 50% to 397.7 tonnes, official coins added 5% to 48 tonnes, and medals/imitation coins rose 23% to 27.9 tonnes. That is not retail panic — that is structural rotation into hard-money assets at a pace the market has only seen twice in the modern data series. Gold-backed ETF flows added 62 tonnes in Q1, slowing materially from the 230-tonne Q1 2025 print after sizable U.S. fund outflows in March, but still net positive across the quarter and consistent with three more weeks of building institutional appetite earlier in the period. Jewellery fabrication demand fell 23% year-over-year to 335 tonnes, with jewellery consumption down 31% to 299.7 tonnes — but jewellery spending values jumped 31%, telling the trader that the buyer base is paying up for less metal rather than walking away from the category. Mine production rose 2% to 884.7 tonnes, recycled gold added 5% to 366 tonnes, net producer hedging stayed negative at -19.7 tonnes, and total supply increased 2% to 1,231 tonnes. The composition of demand has shifted decisively. Investment now far exceeds fabrication for the first sustained stretch in the modern data series, and that is the structural driver any serious gold thesis has to fully account for going forward.
Central banks scooped up 244 tonnes of bullion on a net basis in Q1 2026, a 3% year-over-year increase that arrived against a notable uptick in selling activity from select holders during the quarter. That brings the post-2008 cumulative central bank accumulation to over 225 million ounces, a structural shift in the global reserve architecture that does not unwind on a single Fed press conference, a single oil shock, or a single quarter of price volatility. The geographic distribution of that buying is what makes the cycle durable. Uzbekistan was the largest buyer in January 2026. The Bank of Russia posted the largest single sale at 9 tonnes during the quarter. China continued adding to reserves alongside traditional accumulators including India and Turkey, while the broader regional expansion that Deutsche Bank has been tracking now includes Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt, and the United Arab Emirates as active buyers. Even smaller sovereign players that had been inactive for years — including Malaysia and South Korea — have resumed building reserves. The U.S. dollar’s share of global currency reserves has compressed from over 60% in the early 2000s to roughly 40% currently, and Deutsche Bank projects the gold share of central bank reserves climbing from 30% today toward 40% over the medium-term horizon. That trajectory underwrites the German bank’s $8,000 conceptual scenario over a five-year window — explicitly framed as a model output rather than an official forecast, but the math behind it is internally consistent and the de-dollarization driver shows zero signs of reversing. Even with the January 2026 monthly central bank purchase pace slowing to 5 tonnes versus the 27-tonne 2025 monthly average, the broader trend is the demand expansion across new geographies rather than higher tonnage from existing buyers. That kind of structural demand broadening is more durable than concentrated bid from a handful of major sovereigns, because it cannot be reversed by a single political shift in any one country.
The most consequential data point inside the Q1 2026 World Gold Council release did not come from the headline tonnage figures or the central bank numbers — it came from India, where investment demand surged 52% year-over-year to 82 metric tonnes and topped jewellery demand for the first time on record in a March quarter. That is a structural change in the world’s second-largest gold consumer market, and it tells anyone paying attention that the highest-price-sensitivity buyer base on the planet has flipped from ornamental consumption toward portfolio allocation. India’s wedding-season demand has historically anchored physical jewellery flows in a way that no other market replicates, and the rotation toward bar-and-coin product at record price levels signals that the Indian household has stopped treating gold as decorative inventory and started treating it as a savings vehicle that competes directly with bank deposits, equities, and real estate allocations. The shift compounds across multiple quarters as buyers who entered at $4,800 average prices in Q1 anchor their cost basis and hold through volatility — the asset becomes harder to dislodge from balance sheets the longer the price compression continues. Combine that Indian rotation with the broader Asian retail flow pushing bar and coin demand to 474 tonnes (+42% year-over-year) and the demand floor underneath the current pullback is materially stronger than the price action suggests on a simple chart read. China’s continued central bank accumulation alongside Indian retail rotation creates a two-engine Asian demand structure that has historically been the cleanest leading indicator for multi-quarter gold trend direction. Both engines are firing at the same time.
Crude is the upstream variable strangling gold in the short run, and the framing of the Iran blockade has shifted in ways that materially extend the pressure window. WTI crude (CL=F) has ripped to $103 to $105.25 with a one-day gain exceeding 5%. Brent (BZ=F) sits at $109.88 to $110 with a similar 5.25% advance. The Wall Street Journal reporting that the White House has briefed an extended Strait of Hormuz blockade rather than a ceasefire path means the energy premium is structural rather than tactical, and the Strait of Hormuz carries roughly 20% of global energy supply on any given day. An indefinite closure resets inflation expectations across every major developed economy, not just the United States. The World Bank projected a 24% spike in energy prices for 2026 driven by the Iran conflict, which is the kind of forecast that makes Federal Reserve rate cuts mathematically untenable on any near-term horizon. The data backs the pressure. March CPI printed +0.9% month-over-month and +3.3% year-over-year, with the energy subcomponent up 10.9% on the month and gasoline alone surging 21.2%. The New York Fed’s March consumer survey pinned year-ahead gas-price expectations at 9.4%, the highest reading since March 2022. National average regular gasoline hit $4.18 per gallon according to AAA, up from $2.98 before the Iran war kicked off February 28 — a 40% surge in two months that is now feeding directly into wage-cost expectations across services categories. Kalshi prediction markets show only roughly a 50% probability of any Fed rate cut before 2027, collapsed from the 80% to 90% probability priced earlier this year. The CME FedWatch tool prices the Fed holding rates at year-end at the highest probability of the entire 2026 cycle. Powell’s 14:30 ET press conference is the catalyst that decides direction in the immediate session — any hawkish drift framing inflation upside risks as the dominant concern lifts the higher, drives Treasury yields further into resistance territory, and adds to the pressure compressing gold through the $4,500 level. The 10-year Treasury (^TNX) at 4.401% has broken out of the April range that ran 4.244% to 4.344%. The 30-year Treasury (^TYX) at 4.979% is one bad print from cracking the 5% line — and a clean break of 5% on the long bond would accelerate the gold pullback because rising real yields mechanically raise the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding bullion.
The conventional textbook framing says higher oil benefits gold through the inflation-hedge channel, and over multi-year horizons that relationship holds with high statistical reliability. The current setup inverts that relationship in a way that catches inexperienced longs off-guard and produces exactly the price action playing out on the tape. Higher crude prices push inflation expectations higher in real-time consumer surveys. Those higher expectations force the Fed into a “higher for longer” rate posture that locks the policy rate at restrictive levels. That posture lifts U.S. Treasury yields across the curve. Higher yields raise the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset like gold, which compresses the metal’s relative value proposition versus interest-bearing alternatives. Until the Fed path inflects dovishly — which the Iran-driven energy shock now prevents — gold has to work against rising real yields rather than with them, and that is the macro headwind no chart pattern overrides. The relationship resolves favorably for gold only when one of three things happens: the Iran war ends and oil prices roll over (removing the inflation pressure), the Fed decides inflation expectations have peaked and pivots to cuts (lowering yields), or the U.S. dollar weakens materially against the broader currency basket (boosting gold mechanically through the inverse correlation). None of those three conditions look likely inside the next 30 days based on the current data, which is why the technical setup remains bearish despite the structural demand backdrop being the strongest in two decades.
The four-hour chart structure has compressed into a bearish setup that needs immediate stabilization to avoid a deeper unwind. XAU/USD is trading below the 20-period exponential moving average sitting at $4,639.62, and recent rebound attempts have failed to reclaim that dynamic supply zone — the cleanest signal that bears retain control of the near-term tape. The Relative Strength Index (RSI) hovers near 31 to 32, parked in oversold territory but not yet at the kind of capitulation extreme that signals a high-probability reversal on its own. The Money Flow Index (MFI) is declining, indicating capital continues to leak out of the asset on each test of lower support. The MACD is rising in negative territory, suggesting bearish momentum is weakening but has not flipped. Spinning Top candlestick patterns formed in the $4,576.74 to $4,645.91 range across recent four-hour bars, signaling indecision, but the failure to break and hold above the upper bound keeps the downward bias intact. The current price is sitting between the VWAP and SMA20 lines, which translates to short-term consolidation rather than a directional setup. The level map heading into the Powell decision: immediate support at $4,576.74, secondary support at $4,509.74, deeper support at $4,441.34, and the structural shelf at $4,376.04, with extended downside levels at $4,313.67, $4,254.97, $4,202.40, and $4,157.41 if the structure fully cracks. To the upside, initial resistance at $4,645.91 to $4,640, then $4,698.44, $4,760.74, $4,821.84, $4,881.57, $4,937.88, $4,996.26, $5,052.87, $5,107.72, $5,153.72, and $5,208.41 as the upper envelope. The base case for traders working four-hour charts: short positions below $4,576.74 on increased volume targeting $4,509.74, $4,441.34, $4,376.04, and $4,313.67, with a stop at $4,611.08. The alternative long case: positions above $4,645.91 on volume confirmation targeting $4,698.44, $4,760.74, $4,821.84, $4,881.57, and the $5,052.87 to $5,208.41 extension band, same $4,611.08 stop. The forecast for tomorrow (April 30) projects a daily low at $4,441.34 and a daily high at $4,760.74, with an average price near $4,601.04. The weekly window through May 3 projects a low of $4,254.97 and a high of $5,208.41 with an average near $4,731.69 — that is an enormous expected range and reflects how binary the Powell press conference and the April 30 Q1 GDP and initial jobless claims prints are for direction. The Manufacturing PMI for April lands May 1, layering another data point onto an already loaded macro calendar.
Despite the short-term wreckage, the institutional consensus on multi-year gold appreciation has actually strengthened across this drawdown rather than weakened. Goldman Sachs holds a $5,400 year-end 2026 target, which from the current $4,556 implies roughly 18.5% upside across the next eight months. Deutsche Bank projects $8,000 within five years if the de-dollarization trend continues at its current pace, which from current levels implies roughly 75% upside on a multi-year horizon. JPMorgan has signaled a $4,000 to $6,300 range for April with an average near $5,150, framing current sub-$4,600 prints as the lower band of a structurally elevated regime rather than a top in formation. The drivers feeding those targets are not narrative — they are flow data. Central bank purchases at 244 tonnes in Q1 with the broadening regional buyer base. Bar and coin demand at 474 tonnes, the second-highest quarterly print on record. India’s structural rotation toward investment over jewellery at 82 tonnes (+52% year-over-year). Mine production growing just 2% against demand value growth of 74%. The structural shift of the dollar share of global reserves from over 60% pre-2008 to roughly 40% today, projected to compress further. Gold delivered a 60% gain in 2025, returned 6% during Q1 2026 despite the late-quarter correction, and remains roughly 19% beneath its January peak — meaning anyone entering at current levels is buying a structurally bid asset at a meaningful discount to recent highs while institutional targets sit materially higher than the current spot. The asymmetry favors the patient over the impatient. Goldman Sachs specifically reiterated its $5,400 year-end forecast this week, which is the cleanest institutional vote of confidence available given the current macro headwinds. Deutsche Bank projects that gold could realistically reach 40% of global central bank reserves up from 30% currently, the structural anchor that supports the multi-year price trajectory regardless of short-term volatility.
The mining sector is corroborating the underlying gold thesis even as spot prices wobble, and that corroboration matters because mining capital allocation decisions look five to ten years forward rather than five to ten weeks. Mining M&A deals hit $21.6 billion in the strongest first quarter since 2023, with firms aggressively chasing secure supply chains and pivoting toward strategic partnerships globally. JPMorgan lifted its stake in , joining South Africa’s Public Investment Corp. and as major shareholders boosting their holdings — that is institutional capital allocating into gold equity exposure precisely as the underlying commodity pulls back. Barrick Gold (GOLD) is preparing the leadership and structure for its North American spinout ahead of an IPO later in 2026, signaling sufficient management confidence in the cycle to execute a major corporate restructuring rather than wait for cleaner conditions. widened losses on rising costs and dipping output but is betting on volume growth and Panama stockpile processing to shift momentum later in the year. announced a $1.5 billion investment plan for the La Arena copper-gold project in Peru. Trump reversed the Minnesota mining ban, reopening Cook, Lake, and Saint Louis counties to potential resource development. consolidated full ownership of Tanbreez in an $835 million deal with European Lithium. The RCMP charged former RPX Gold CEO Quentin Yarie with fraud over alleged assay data manipulation — a reminder that even at the margin of the sector, the cycle is hot enough that capital deployment is being scrutinized aggressively. None of those moves happen in a structurally bearish commodity environment. Capital allocators with multi-decade horizons are buying the supply side at current prices, which is the cleanest possible vote of confidence on where this cycle resolves.
That’s TradingNEWS.com

