COMEX gold futures entered a bear market Wednesday, settling at $4,133.30 an ounce, down 23% from January's record high of $5,354.80 and the lowest finish since November 2025.
"The selloff is all about interest rates," Chris Gaffney, president of World Markets at EverBank, said. "Higher CPI data leads investors to believe the next Fed move will be upward."
The US May consumer price index rose to 4.2% from 3.8%, the highest since May 2023. The 30-year Treasury yield climbed above 5% to 5.016%, while the 10-year note yielded 4.535%. Markets now price a 43% probability of a Fed rate hike by December, up from 14% a month ago, CME FedWatch data shows.
The 91-day descent from peak to bear market is the fastest since 2008, when gold took 23 days to fall 20%. With the Strait of Hormuz blockade pushing oil prices higher and feeding inflation expectations, gold faces headwinds from both rising real yields and a strengthening dollar.
Gold's breakdown marks a stark reversal from January, when the metal traded as much as 23.4% higher year to date. It has now lost 4.8% in 2026. The decline erased roughly $9.75 trillion in market value from the precious metals complex, according to BullTheory data, with silver falling 47.7% and shedding an additional $3.2 trillion.
Rates Trump Geopolitics as Gold's Primary Driver
The Iran conflict and Strait of Hormuz blockade — events that historically would boost gold — have instead intensified selling. Higher oil prices from the supply disruption feed inflation, which strengthens the case for tighter monetary policy. Gold offers no yield, so rising bond returns increase its opportunity cost.
"Gold is not paying you anything, while Treasurys and bonds are paying you to park your money risk-free," Naeem Aslam, chief investment officer at Zaye Capital Markets, said.
The metal's correlation with equities has also shifted. Since June 1, the correlation coefficient between gold futures and the Nasdaq 100 stood at 0.91, FactSet data shows. Gold fell in tandem with US stocks Wednesday, with the S&P 500 dropping 1.2% and the Nasdaq Composite losing 1.5%.
Gold broke below its 200-day moving average for the first time in 660 trading days, triggering programmatic selling, according to Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank.
Central Bank Selling Adds to Downside Pressure
Official-sector flows, once a reliable support, have turned negative. Turkey's central bank has been selling gold to support the lira, while Gulf nations including Qatar, the UAE and Saudi Arabia have liquidated holdings to fund war-related spending, according to Nigam Arora, founder of the Arora Report.
Citigroup lowered its three-month gold target to $4,000 an ounce from $4,300, with a downside scenario of $3,500 if the Strait of Hormuz blockade persists through late summer. The bank maintained its 6- to 12-month target of $5,000.
Not all analysts see the decline as permanent. EverBank's Gaffney called the selloff "a great opportunity to put some additional money to work," describing gold as "catastrophe insurance" for portfolios. Yardeni Research maintained a year-end target of $5,500 and a long-term forecast of $10,000.
The next catalyst for gold will be the resolution — or escalation — of the Strait of Hormuz situation. As Huatai Securities summarized: "Strait not open, gold hard to rise."
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.