Gold markets are currently experiencing high-level consolidation. Although the price has faced significant resistance near the $5,200 per ounce level, the overall upward trend remains intact. Analysis indicates that after the sharp volatility in late January, gold prices have demonstrated strong recovery capabilities, with monthly gains reaching over 5% at one point. While a necessary period of oscillation and consolidation may occur during the spring, the core drivers supporting higher gold prices—shifts in global economic policy and safe-haven demand—remain firmly in place. This provides substantial room for prices to reach the $6,000 target by year-end or within the next 12 months.
The three primary engines of gold's upward momentum—physical demand, central bank reserves, and ETF inflows—are currently in a phase of rhythm adjustment. Recent data shows that the pace of investors adding positions at elevated price levels has slowed, leading directly to a near-term weakening of buying momentum. However, this consolidation is expected to be temporary, especially considering that trade uncertainties stemming from tariff policies are re-emerging as a market focus. In the context of potential volatility in the global monetary system, gold's appeal as a "hard currency" is likely to attract more long-term capital attention during any pullbacks.
At the monetary policy level, leadership changes among senior Federal Reserve officials have introduced new variables. While the nomination of a new chair initially triggered market selling, over the long term, the independence of monetary policy and potential interest rate cutting tendencies are not negative factors for gold. Most investors currently anticipate a weaker US dollar, and historical patterns show that a weak dollar typically acts as a catalyst for rising gold prices. Even if the Fed attempts to withdraw liquidity by reducing its balance sheet, without corresponding fiscal contraction, such operations could easily trigger money market liquidity shortages and heightened concerns over fiscal deficits, ultimately forcing safe-haven flows back into the gold market.
In the coming months, as debt maturity pressures mount and interest rate policy becomes clearer, gold is expected to complete its technical consolidation within the $5,100 to $5,200 range. For investors, the current volatility is more indicative of the market reshaping its consensus around the new monetary policy environment. As long as the structural issues of global debt expansion remain fundamentally unresolved, any short-term pullbacks caused by expectations of liquidity tightening will present opportunities for institutional investors to increase their gold holdings. In summary, gold's structural bull market is far from over; a brief cooling-off period serves as preparation for a renewed push toward higher targets.