Metals Focus: Gold Bull Market Still Has Legs

Metals Focus has released its Gold Focus 2026 report. It includes comprehensive historical supply and demand data for 2017-25 and its 2026 forecast.

Despite the recent selling pressure in the gold market, that 2026 forecast remains bullish.

Looking Back

Investment inflows drove gold to the strongest gain in decades in 2025. The yellow metal’s price rose 44 percent last year and topped $4,500 for the first time late in the year. It was the best year for gold since 1979.

“Central to this rally were exceptionally strong investment inflows, driven by the new U.S. administration’s marked divergence from established norms on trade and domestic and foreign policy, alongside its continued loose fiscal stance. Pressure on the U.S. dollar, coupled with concerns over its future role as a de facto reserve currency, also supported prices.”

Physical gold investment rose by 16 percent to a 12-year high, reflecting bullish price expectations and heightened economic and geopolitical uncertainty. China (+28 percent) and India (+17 percent) led the surge in physical gold investment.

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Concerns about the dollar drove central bank gold buying, another key dynamic supporting the gold bull market.

Many countries are worried about the weaponization of the dollar and the rapidly deteriorating fiscal situation in the U.S. This has driven a modest de-dollarization trend as these countries seek to minimize their dependence on the greenback.

The pace of central bank purchases moderated in 2025 but remained far above the recent historical average. Official net full-year buying came in at 863.3 tonnes. That was down 21 percent year-on-year, charting the lowest level since 2021.