Gold has corrected 29% from its January record, and RBC Capital Markets sees the sell-off creating a compelling entry point for longer-term investors.
Gold traded at $4,028 per ounce Monday, down 11% in June, after RBC Capital Markets described the sell-off as an attractive longer-term buying opportunity for institutional allocators.
"The magnitude of this correction has brought gold closer to levels where re-entry makes sense from a portfolio construction perspective," RBC Capital Markets said in a note Monday, without specifying a price target. The bank cited central bank buying and structural de-dollarization as underpinning the bull case.
The metal has fallen 29% from its all-time high of $5,589 set in January, breaching the psychologically significant $4,000 level in late June before finding support near $3,960-$3,970, according to COMEX data. The decline accelerated as the US Dollar Index climbed to 13-month highs and the Federal Reserve signaled a hawkish stance, with markets pricing in up to three rate hikes this year. Goldman Sachs cut its year-end gold target to $4,900 on June 20, citing fading ETF inflows, while J.P. Morgan maintained gold as its "highest conviction long" with a $5,000 year-end forecast.
The question for gold is whether the official-sector bid that rewired the metal's relationship with real yields re-accelerates or plateaus. Central banks bought more than 1,000 tonnes annually in each of the past three years, according to the World Gold Council, though reported net buying slowed in the first quarter of 2026. The World Gold Council's latest survey found 45% of central banks plan to increase reserves over the next year, with none planning to cut.
The central bank bid and the dollar headwind
The structural bull case rests on sovereign demand. The freezing of Russian central bank reserves after 2022 accelerated a de-dollarization trend that made gold a reserve asset of choice for non-aligned nations. That price-insensitive buying overwhelmed the traditional real-yield model, allowing gold to set records even as US real yields stayed high.
Yet the near-term headwind is formidable. A strong dollar and positive real yields raise the opportunity cost of holding a non-yielding asset — the same regime that drove gold down 45% between 2011 and 2015. The 52-week range of $3,248 to $5,597 illustrates the scale of the tug-of-war between structural buyers and a hostile macro environment.
What happens next
For long-horizon allocators, the discipline is to treat gold as a position on the monetary order rather than a trade on the next data point. The World Gold Council's quarterly official-sector flows report will be the single most important data series to watch: if central bank buying re-accelerates, the $4,800-$5,000 year-end targets from Goldman and JPMorgan remain achievable. If it stalls in a strong-dollar regime, gold could trade sideways for an extended period despite the structural narrative.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.