Gold investors were already facing a messy setup after the metal’s sharp pullback from earlier highs.
Reuters reported spot gold around $4,344.77 an ounce and U.S. gold futures near $4,366.80 after the U.S.-Iran peace deal cooled oil prices and Treasury yields.
Moreover, according to Barchart, August 2026 COMEX gold futures are at $4,385.30, with the contract down 4.8% over the past month, down 14.8% over three months and down 1.5% year-to-date.
That looked like a clear warning sign, and investors were selling gold’s momentum, but Barclays is arguing the deeper bull case has not disappeared.
According to a report from MarketWatch, the bank kept its gold forecasts at $4,791 an ounce for 2026 and $4,900 for 2027, pointing to inflation, policy uncertainty and central-bank buying as support.
The question now is whether gold’s sell-off marks a broken trade or a reset before another move higher.
Bloomberg
What Barclays said about gold’s recent pullback
Barclays said gold’s recent weakness was not driven by a single factor.
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In fact, the bank’s research team said gold underperformed during the latest geopolitical stress because of a stronger dollar, rising investor appetite for stocks and crowded positioning.
Put simply, gold was expected to act like a haven, but risk capital kept moving toward stocks instead.
Barclays estimated that the jump in the dollar index and the S&P 500’s roughly 10% rally implied about a 10% drop in gold prices.
The rest of the drop came from the unwinding of crowded and leveraged positions.
That said, the bank acknowledges the near-term risk, which is gold potentially facing mark-to-market downside, even though Barclays kept its forecasts intact.
However, Barclays argues the pullback has not broken the gold story because the broader drivers remain intact.
It pointed to ongoing inflation, policy uncertainty and continued reserve diversification.
The bank also said each 1 percentage-point increase in inflation gives gold about a 5% uplift, making inflation and energy-price pressure key to the bull case.
Additionally, Barclays’ research team recommended these gold mining plays:
- Endeavour Mining (EDVMF) is primarily a gold producer focused on West Africa, with its stock up 9.86% over six months and 2.10% YTD.
- Hochschild Mining (HCHDF) mines gold and silver in the Americas, with its stock up 14.37% over six months, though it remains down 1.90% YTD, making it more of a rebound play.
- Fresnillo (FNLPF) is a major silver producer and one of Mexico’s largest gold producers, with its stock up 3.17% over six months but down 10.54% YTD.
- Newmont (NEM) is one of the world’s largest gold miners, with its stock up 2.58% over six months and 0.82% YTD.
- Agnico Eagle Mines (AEM) is a major Canadian gold producer, with its stock down 2.93% over six months and 3.66% YTD.
The key numbers behind Barclays’ gold forecast
- Barclays kept its gold-price forecasts at $4,791 an ounce for 2026 and $4,900 for 2027, even after the recent pullback.
- The bank said gold is now trading near levels implied by real rates, with prices not far from Barclays’ $4,150 fair-value estimate.
- Barclays estimated that every 1 percentage-point increase in inflation gives gold about a 5% uplift, keeping inflation pressure central to its bullish case.
- The team said the dollar’s jump and the S&P 500’s 10% rally implied a roughly 10% drop in gold prices.
What Barclays’ rebound call means for investors
Barclays’ sharp call drops at a point when gold’s pullback is happening against a mixed macro backdrop.
The latest inflation report gave gold bulls a reason to stay interested.
According to the Bureau of Labor Statistics, CPI rose 0.5% in May and 4.2% from a year earlier, while energy prices jumped 3.9% for the month and 23.5% over 12 months, keeping inflation protection relevant.
The jobs data complicates the picture.
Employers added 172,000 jobs in May and unemployment held at 4.3%, according to the BLS, giving the Fed less urgency to ease policy quickly.
That is why yields, the dollar and rate expectations still matter while markets cut the odds of a December rate hike from nearly 70% to 52.5%.
For investors, the question is whether inflation and policy risk overpower the pressure from yields and risk-on AI trades.
Wall Street’s price targets on gold
- Goldman Sachs has an end-2026 gold target of $5,400 per ounce.
- Wells Fargo Investment Institute slapped a year-end 2026 gold target of $6,100 to $6,300 per ounce.
- UBS has a 2026 gold target of $5,600 per ounce.
- Bank of America has a 12-month gold target of $6,000 per ounce.
- J.P. Morgan sees gold jumping to $6,000 per ounce by the end of 2026.
- Citi has a near-term gold target of $4,000 per ounce.
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