Gold's ascent since March 2024 has been fueled by relentless central-bank buying, geopolitical tensions, a weaker dollar, and low real yields. But with prices near $5,100/oz, four headwinds could stall momentum over the next six months. Drawing from SelfishInvesting.com's pragmatic analysis, let's evaluate each risk and the odds it **does not materialize**—the probability gold dodges the bullet and presses higher.
1. **Stronger U.S. Dollar Rally**
A hawkish Fed or robust data (e.g., hot jobs or inflation prints) could lift the dollar index, capping gold. But with tariffs inflating costs and Fed cuts priced in (75–100 bps 2026), a surge seems unlikely. The USD's recent 3–5% gains are already extended, and tariff chaos favors dollar weakness. Odds it doesn't happen: **70–80%**. Gold's inverse dollar correlation holds, but fiscal stimulus limits upside pressure on rates.
2. **Geopolitical De-Escalation**
Ceasefires in the Middle East or tariff resolutions could erase the 10–20% risk premium in gold. However, ongoing Iran brinkmanship (Polymarket odds of escalation 45–55%) and Trump's Section 122 defiance keep uncertainty high. Historical patterns show resolutions take months amid escalations. Odds de-escalation doesn't happen: **85–90%**. Persistent chaos is the base case, sustaining haven flows.
3. **Overbought Speculation Unwind**
CFTC longs at cycle highs risk cascading sales. But structural demand (1,000+ tonnes central-bank buying annually) provides a floor, limiting depth. Spec positioning has corrected 15–20% from peaks without breaking the uptrend. Odds unwind doesn't happen: **60–70%**. Abundance narratives (AI productivity) and fiscal hedging maintain bids during dips.
4. **Slower Global Growth**
Tariffs or AI capex pauses could drag demand. Yet hyperscaler spending ($690B+ 2026) and stimulus counter this; IMF forecasts remain steady at 3.2%. Tariff impacts are gradual, not immediate shocks. Odds it doesn't happen: **75–85%**. Productivity boom sustains growth despite headwinds.
These risks are entangled, but gold's structural tailwinds dominate. Nevertheless, expect chop as it moves higher.
1. **Stronger U.S. Dollar Rally**
A hawkish Fed or robust data (e.g., hot jobs or inflation prints) could lift the dollar index, capping gold. But with tariffs inflating costs and Fed cuts priced in (75–100 bps 2026), a surge seems unlikely. The USD's recent 3–5% gains are already extended, and tariff chaos favors dollar weakness. Odds it doesn't happen: **70–80%**. Gold's inverse dollar correlation holds, but fiscal stimulus limits upside pressure on rates.
2. **Geopolitical De-Escalation**
Ceasefires in the Middle East or tariff resolutions could erase the 10–20% risk premium in gold. However, ongoing Iran brinkmanship (Polymarket odds of escalation 45–55%) and Trump's Section 122 defiance keep uncertainty high. Historical patterns show resolutions take months amid escalations. Odds de-escalation doesn't happen: **85–90%**. Persistent chaos is the base case, sustaining haven flows.
3. **Overbought Speculation Unwind**
CFTC longs at cycle highs risk cascading sales. But structural demand (1,000+ tonnes central-bank buying annually) provides a floor, limiting depth. Spec positioning has corrected 15–20% from peaks without breaking the uptrend. Odds unwind doesn't happen: **60–70%**. Abundance narratives (AI productivity) and fiscal hedging maintain bids during dips.
4. **Slower Global Growth**
Tariffs or AI capex pauses could drag demand. Yet hyperscaler spending ($690B+ 2026) and stimulus counter this; IMF forecasts remain steady at 3.2%. Tariff impacts are gradual, not immediate shocks. Odds it doesn't happen: **75–85%**. Productivity boom sustains growth despite headwinds.
These risks are entangled, but gold's structural tailwinds dominate. Nevertheless, expect chop as it moves higher.