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Danske Bank: Forecasts Brent Crude Oil Average Price To Be $80 Per Barrel For The Remainder Of 2026
Australia's Preliminary S&P Global Manufacturing PMI For June Came In At 51.2, Up From The Previous Reading Of 50.7
Despite The Continued Recovery In Oil Liquidity In The Persian Gulf, Barclays Maintains Its 2026 Brent Crude Oil Price Forecast At $100 Per Barrel
Air Raid Sirens Have Been Issued In Kyiv, Ukraine, And The Government Is Urging Residents To Seek Refuge
U.S. Media: Trump's Intelligence System Has Launched A Major Round Of Layoffs, And A Purge Of The "deep State" Is Underway
Federal Reserve's Goolsby: Federal Reserve Chairman Warsh's Approach Is To Reduce Speculation On Interest Rates And Reduce Forward Guidance; I Quite Agree With This Approach
Federal Reserve's Goolsby: Evidence Is Needed To Prove That This Inflation Is Temporary; Inflation In The Services Sector Is Slightly Worrying
Federal Reserve's Goolsby: We Have Not Yet Experienced A Stagflation Shock, And The Labor Market Has Remained Stable
Federal Reserve's Goolsby: Markets Remain Stable; Inflation Is Well Above Target, A Negative Outlook
The Governor Of The Central Bank Of Iran Stated That The Remaining Frozen Funds Will Not Necessarily Be Used Only For Basic Commodities; Iran Will Be Able To Purchase Other Unsanctioned Goods
According To Iran's Tasnim News Agency, The Governor Of The Central Bank Of Iran Stated That Tehran Is Not Obligated To Purchase Agricultural Inputs From The United States Under Existing Agreements
Goldman Sachs: If The Resumption Of Qatar's LNG Exports Is Delayed By Two Months To The End Of September 2026, It Could Bring TTF Gas Prices Closer To €50/MWh In The Fourth Quarter Of 2026, Rather Than The €40/MWh We Predicted
Trump Signed Two Executive Orders To Advance The Deployment Of Quantum Computers For Scientific Research By 2028
Federal Reserve Chairman Warsh Will Testify Before The House Financial Services Committee At 10 A.m. Eastern Time (evening Beijing Time) On July 14

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By Ian Salisbury
Gold is having a bad month. The struggles will likely turn out to be a blip rather than the start of a sustained downturn, Goldman Sachs says.
All in all it has been a great year for gold, with the precious metal up nearly 75%. Starting about a month ago, however, investors began to show some doubts. Gold reached a record high of $4,336 an ounce on Oct. 30. Since then, it's tumbled about 6% to $4,062 on Tuesday.
One culprit has been a strengthening U.S. dollar. Since gold is priced in dollars, a stronger dollar makes gold more expensive for global buyers who need to swap out of local currencies to acquire the metal.
A separate, but related, factor is the outlook for U.S. interest rates. A month ago, markets were all but certain the Federal Reserve would issue another interest-rate cut in December. In the past few weeks, those odds have fallen below 50%. Higher U.S. interest rates help strengthen the dollar and make gold, which doesn't pay any interest, comparatively less attractive than Treasuries.
The question weighing on gold investors: Is this just a bull market gut check, or the start of a bigger selloff?
Put Goldman Sachs clearly in the blip camp.
On Monday, the investment bank forecast gold prices would hit $4,900 by the end of 2026, representing a gain of about 21% on Tuesday's price. The metal could go even higher, according to Goldman analyst Lina Thomas. She sees "significant upside if the private investors diversification theme were to gain more traction" — a reference to more U.S. and international investors buying gold to complement their stock-and-bond portfolios.
What's behind all the bullishness? The current gold rally has been driven by heavy buying from two key sources — central banks and private investors, such as retirement savers, investment funds and more. Goldman doesn't see either one changing their behavior.
Central banks began buying gold to move away from dollar-denominated assets in 2022, after the U.S. froze Russian assets in response to the country's invasion of Ukraine. That rationale hasn't changed, notes Goldman, which says central banks' purchases appear to have ticked up in September, the latest month for which it has data.
Gold buying by investors, such as Main Street retirement savers, also appears to be on the rise. So far this year, investors have poured more than $41 billion into SPDR Gold Shares and other exchange-traded funds. While ETF investors have pulled some money out in the past month, the turnaround hasn't been dramatic, with the funds seeing outflows of only around $1.2 billion. Thomas expects ETF investors, alongside ultrahigh net worth individuals who buy physical gold, to continue accumulating the metal.
Goldman isn't the only one that remains bullish despite the pullback. Last week, strategists at UBS predicted gold could hit $5,000 in 2026 or 2027.
Write to Ian Salisbury at ian.salisbury@barrons.com
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