Gold is confronting a convergence of multiple headwinds. A combination of rising rate expectations, forced central bank reserve sales, and a wave of tech IPOs drawing capital away is pressuring the metal, sending prices to a six-month low and threatening the worst quarterly performance in nearly a decade.
On Thursday, the gold price fell more than 1% at one point, touching $4,022 per ounce, its lowest level since late November last year, before recovering to around $4,189. Since the Middle East conflict erupted in February this year, gold has declined by more than 20%.
The Core Drivers of the Downturn
The primary driver of this decline is a fundamental reversal in market expectations for the Federal Reserve's interest rate path. Traders have shifted from anticipating two to three rate cuts this year to now pricing in one potential rate hike. Concurrently, major initial public offerings from tech giants like SpaceX are diverting investor capital, further eroding gold's appeal.
Reversal in Rate Expectations Lifts Opportunity Cost
The core macro backdrop for gold's weakness is inflationary pressure stemming from surging oil prices. Traders have significantly altered their outlook for the Fed's rate trajectory this year, moving from expecting two or three cuts to anticipating one hike.
This reversal in interest rate expectations directly increases the opportunity cost of holding gold. Gold itself generates no yield, and when the relative attractiveness of assets like U.S. Treasury bonds rises, capital tends to flow out of the precious metal.
According to a report, Peter Kinsella, Head of Investment Services at UBP, stated, "After the Iran situation erupted, investors began de-risking their portfolios. They sold gold to cover margins on other underperforming assets. Any de-risking operation leads to gold being sold."
Flows into gold exchange-traded funds confirm this trend. Data from the World Gold Council shows that from March to May this year, global gold ETFs saw net outflows of 55 tonnes, ending a streak of nine consecutive months of net inflows.
Central Bank Forced Sales Add to Supply Pressure
The outbreak of conflict in the Middle East has compelled some central banks to liquidate gold reserves to defend their currencies, adding further supply pressure to the market.
Turkey recently sold and swapped $20 billion worth of gold reserves to support its currency, while Russia has also sold gold to fill fiscal gaps.
It is important to note that these sales are reactive, forced measures and do not represent a shift in the overall stance of global central banks. Globally, central banks remain net buyers of gold on aggregate. A recent European Central Bank report indicated that gold surpassed U.S. Treasury bonds late last year to become the single largest asset class by value within global reserve assets.
IPO Frenzy Diverts Capital, Gold Loses Narrative Edge
Beyond macro pressures, an impending wave of major tech IPOs is competing with gold for investor attention and liquidity.
SpaceX plans to launch a large-scale IPO on Friday, with artificial intelligence companies Anthropic and OpenAI also preparing to go public. Tom Price, an analyst at Panmure Liberum, commented, "This is a potential drag on gold because investors are looking for something else to keep the enthusiasm going. Gold is in a bit of a funk right now, and they're looking for the next big thing. SpaceX is the next big thing."
Jefferies analyst Mohit Kumar characterized these large IPOs as "near-term liquidity drain events," suggesting they have already put downward pressure on both gold and cryptocurrency prices.
Previously, an influx of retail investors had propelled gold into a historic bull run, with prices doubling at one point over two years. However, as market sentiment has shifted, retail funds have begun to withdraw. Coupled with institutional capital being diverted to the IPO market, the bullish narrative for gold is now being tested.