Precious metals have been on a rollercoaster. Gold prices surged to record highs in 2025 and early 2026 amid safe-haven buying, and silver and platinum also rallied strongly, before a sharp reversal struck in Q1 2026. Major forces that propelled gold upward are de-dollarization, easy liquidity, reserve diversification, and geopolitical risks, and the recent developments tightening liquidity, Middle Eastern dynamics, dollar strengthening and unwinding of leverage – triggered the decline.
A Historic Rally in Gold (2025)
The recent rise in gold until early this year was mainly supported by a weak dollar and easy money, coupled with the central bank “de-dollarization” purchases and geopolitical demand.
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Safe-Haven Flows on Geopolitical Jitters: Conflicts like the war in Ukraine and Middle East flare-ups, along with escalating U.S tariff tantrums since Feb 2025, created a climate of uncertainty. Investors sought safety in gold to guard against volatile equity markets and geopolitical risks. This flight to safety was a key pillar of gold’s strength, as fear and uncertainty made gold’s stability appealing when other assets faltered.
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Easy Money and Ample Liquidity: Central Banks continued with easy liquidity to counter the negative growth impact from tariff situation, which made it cheap to borrow and invest some of that capital into gold. The U.S. dollar weakened by roughly 10% in 2025, influenced in part by these dovish policy signals. Since gold is traded globally in dollars, a softer dollar lowers its price for overseas buyers, making gold more affordable and therefore more appealing. Falling real interest rates also boosted gold’s appeal.
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De-dollarization and Reserve Diversification: US’s mounting fiscal strains have reinforced the de- dollarization push. The U.S. gross national debt soared to about $39 trillion by Dec 2025, fuelled by persistent large deficits (~$1.8T in 2025). Consequently, for geopolitical and financial stability reasons, many emerging market central banks have been ramping up gold purchases to reduce their reliance on the dollar. Central banks collectively added ~1,000 tonnes of gold in last 3 years – taking Gold’s share in Reserves from ~13% to over 24%. Notably, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) was also among the major buyers, boosting India’s gold reserves in recent years.
The cumulative effect of these forces was a remarkable upswell in the price of gold and by January 2026, gold had climbed further to nearly $5,600 per ounce.
The Sharp Reversal in Early 2026
After a spectacular run-up, gold’s fortunes turned abruptly in the latter part of Q1 2026. By late March, gold had given up all its year-to-date (2026) gains, falling back to Dec 2025 levels – roughly $4,100–4,300/oz – a drop of about 20–25% from the peak of Jan 2026. The downturn began with the widespread unwinding of leveraged positions as investors booked profits. The subsequent escalation in the US–Iran conflict pushed oil prices sharply higher, stoking inflation concerns. This, in turn, led to tighter global liquidity conditions and a stronger U.S. dollar, while falling surplus in parts of the Middle East further weighed on falling gold prices.
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Unwinding of Leveraged Positions: Gold’s prior rally had been amplified by investors using leverage – from hedge funds increasing futures positions to retail buyers piling into gold ETFs. When the tide turned, these leveraged bets began to unravel. Profit-booking set in, and as prices slipped from their highs, a wave of
stop-loss orders was triggered, automated sell orders kicked in, accelerating the decline in a self-reinforcing spiral. Margin calls forced further liquidation as investors sold gold to cover losses in other assets during the concurrent equity market turmoil.
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Middle Eastern Surplus Dry Up: The US–Iran conflict, that erupted in late February 2026, disrupted oil shipments from the Persian Gulf, threatening regional stability. The crisis put certain oil-rich states under financial stress: with their oil revenues in jeopardy and rising expenditures, Gulf nations no longer enjoyed large surpluses to invest in gold. Market observers even speculated that some Middle Eastern oil producers might liquidate gold reserves to raise cash, recalling the infamous 1983 scenario when OPEC members sold off gold amid an oil revenue collapse.
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Inflation Fears and Liquidity Squeeze: In mid-March, Fed Chair Jerome Powell signalled that the oil shock was an “energy-driven inflation tax” requiring interest rates to stay higher for longer. Consequently, the US dollar shot up to multi-year highs and the 10-year Treasury yield climbed above 4.35% by late March. The war-induced surge in inflation also raised concerns that global central banks would drain liquidity or delay any easing. Signs of tightening dollar funding appeared (e.g. widening cross-currency swap spreads), reinforcing the view that cash dollars were in high demand. All these factors removed the liquidity tailwinds that had buoyed gold and instead created headwinds of strengthened dollar and a resolutely hawkish policy outlook.
The result was a crash in precious metals by mid-March: gold dropped over 10% in a week (its steepest weekly fall since 1983) and silver plunged more than 15% in that same week. At the same time, a previously supportive trend began to reverse; after two years of accumulation, central banks slowed their gold purchases in early 2026, and gold-backed ETFs saw net outflows for several consecutive weeks.
Impact on India
As one of the world’s largest gold consumers and importers, India is directly affected by big moves in gold.
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Trade Balance & Inflation: When gold prices soar, India’s import bill rises (as the country imports a large portion of its gold consumption). Record high gold prices in 2025 contributed to a wider trade deficit and put upward pressure on inflation – higher bullion costs filtered through to domestic gold and jewellery prices. Indeed, India’s core CPI in late 2025 ticked up despite a lower WPI, partly due to costlier gold.
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Central Bank Reserves: RBI has been part of the global gold buying spree, indicating that policymakers value gold as a strategic asset. It increased its gold reserves in recent years, aligning with the trend of diversifying foreign exchange reserves into gold. The recent price drop does not change that long-term strategy, though it might offer an opportunity for central banks to accumulate gold at slightly lower prices.
What Next for Gold?
As of 24th March 2026, gold trades around the mid-$4,000s per ounce, having erased its gains for the year. There are early signs of bargain-hunting: speculative positions have started to build again anticipating a comeback. However, the outlook will depend on how the global macro environment evolves. In the near term, much hinges on liquidity, inflation and central banks.
Scenario 1: If inflation remains elevated due to persistent high oil prices, central bankers may keep liquidity tight bolstering the dollar and yields, which would cap gold’s upside.
Scenario 2: On the other hand, if oil prices settle down indicating lower inflation risk, it could rekindle expectations of rate cuts, easier liquidity and a weaker dollar: conditions under which gold typically thrives. Moreover, if geopolitical risks intensify to the point of severely undermining global growth (a “hard landing” scenario), even a hawkish Fed might be forced to pivot, potentially restoring gold’s safe-haven shine.
Gold’s 2025 rally was built on trust: that inflation would stay low, interest rates would fall, and gold would safeguard against geopolitical storms and currency debasement. The early 2026 sell-off was driven by fear: that inflation would spiral, liquidity would tighten, and even traditional buyers might turn into sellers. For now, Gold’s lustre is tempered by a resurgent dollar and high interest rates. Yet the long-term story of central banks, investors, and even Indian households valuing gold as a resilient store of wealth remains intact.