Recently, this wave of gold market movement has indeed been quite fierce. It seems there is a reason behind it—at least three forces are driving the momentum.
On one hand, central banks around the world are accumulating gold. Under the backdrop of the restructuring of the monetary system, central banks continue to increase their gold holdings, forming a structural and hard-to-shake buying pressure. On the other hand, expectations of a Federal Reserve rate cut are heating up, which directly reduces the opportunity cost of holding gold and supports gold prices. Additionally, geopolitical tensions are somewhat unstable, triggering safe-haven demand, and gold, as a traditional safe-haven asset, naturally becomes more attractive.
From a technical perspective, after a brief correction before the holiday, gold quickly stabilized, and the bulls' support was quite strong. This indicates there is still room for further upward movement. In the short term, if the gold price retraces to the key support zone of 4400-4430, consider buying on dips, with targets aimed at the 4550-4600 range.
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
14 Likes
Reward
14
7
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
SleepTrader
· 14h ago
Central bank gold accumulation + interest rate cut expectations + safe-haven demand, this logic indeed holds. Just wait for the pullback to 4400 before jumping in.
View OriginalReply0
FloorSweeper
· 14h ago
Central banks hoarding gold is indeed true, but the real profit still depends on timing. Will this 4400-4430 really drop?
View OriginalReply0
rugpull_ptsd
· 15h ago
Central banks are frantically hoarding gold, with expectations of rate cuts and geopolitical turmoil. This wave of gold prices isn't rising in vain; the bulls are guarding it as tightly as an iron gate.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropF5Bro
· 15h ago
Central bank gold accumulation, interest rate cut expectations, safe-haven demand... In simple terms, no one is optimistic about the US dollar, and gold has become the favorite. Is it really a good entry point at the 4400-4430 level?
View OriginalReply0
FlashLoanLarry
· 15h ago
The central bank is frantically hoarding gold, and we retail investors have to keep up, or else we'll really get swept away.
View OriginalReply0
Ser_This_Is_A_Casino
· 15h ago
Central banks hoarding gold is really the trend, it seems this gold bull market has just begun.
View OriginalReply0
AirdropAnxiety
· 15h ago
Central bank gold hoarding, interest rate cut expectations, safe-haven demand... In simple terms, everyone is panicking, and gold is the hard currency.
Recently, this wave of gold market movement has indeed been quite fierce. It seems there is a reason behind it—at least three forces are driving the momentum.
On one hand, central banks around the world are accumulating gold. Under the backdrop of the restructuring of the monetary system, central banks continue to increase their gold holdings, forming a structural and hard-to-shake buying pressure. On the other hand, expectations of a Federal Reserve rate cut are heating up, which directly reduces the opportunity cost of holding gold and supports gold prices. Additionally, geopolitical tensions are somewhat unstable, triggering safe-haven demand, and gold, as a traditional safe-haven asset, naturally becomes more attractive.
From a technical perspective, after a brief correction before the holiday, gold quickly stabilized, and the bulls' support was quite strong. This indicates there is still room for further upward movement. In the short term, if the gold price retraces to the key support zone of 4400-4430, consider buying on dips, with targets aimed at the 4550-4600 range.