Lead
Gold's sharp downshift has crystallized a narrative shift in the precious-metals market: while bullion has been labeled by several market participants as in bear-market territory, a subset of veteran strategists continues to project extremely bullish long-term outcomes, including $10,000 per ounce targets. The CNBC report dated Mar 24, 2026 cites several market-watchers holding to those ambitious forecasts even after significant near-term losses (CNBC, Mar 24, 2026). Historically, gold reached an all-time high of $2,070 per ounce on Aug 6, 2020 (LBMA); the current retracement from that peak is one reference point for the bear-market classification. Central-bank policy, real yields, dollar strength, and liquidity dynamics are the proximate drivers of this re-pricing; each factor has shifted materially since the pandemic-era lows in interest rates. This article dissects the data underpinning the selloff, contrasts the bearish near term with contrarian long-term claims, and assesses sector implications for miners, ETFs and macro portfolios.
Context
Gold's recent decline must be read through the lens of a multi-year regime change in macro policy. After the Federal Reserve shifted from emergency zero rates to a tightening cycle beginning in 2022, policy rates moved into positive territory and remained elevated through 2024–2025; higher real yields historically weigh on non-yielding assets such as gold (Federal Reserve). The simple mechanics are well known: when real yields rise, the opportunity cost of holding bullion increases and demand from interest-sensitive buyers can wane. Moreover, the U.S. dollar index strengthened episodically in late 2025 and early 2026 on risk-off flows and relative rate differentials, putting further downward pressure on dollar-denominated commodities.
A second contextual element is investor positioning and flows. Exchange-traded funds and bullion-backed trusts saw material swings in inflows/outflows during the 2022–2026 period, with recent months registering net redemptions in some regional listings; these shifts amplify price moves when liquidity is dispersed across retail and institutional channels. The bear-market label frequently used in market commentary is operational — commonly defined as a 20% decline from a recent peak — and, depending on the chosen peak and timeframe, commentators concluded that gold had crossed that threshold in early 2026 (benchmark definitions vary). For many institutional investors, the technical classification is less important than the drivers: monetary policy, geopolitical risk, and demand from central banks and jewelry markets.
Finally, the macro backdrop that supported gold’s decade-long accumulation — low real rates, quantitative easing, and persistent inflationary concerns — has partially unwound. Inflation readings cooled from their 2021–2022 highs but remained above long-term averages in several economies, producing a complex mixture of stagflationary fears and tighter-credit dynamics. This complexity is reflected in divergent price paths: gold has underperformed several risk assets year-to-date while outperforming some commodities linked to global growth, underscoring its dual role as both inflation hedge and safe-haven asset.
Data Deep Dive
Three datapoints anchor the current debate and are useful for institutional calibration. First, gold’s all-time nominal high was $2,070 per ounce (LBMA) on Aug 6, 2020; using that reference, the metal’s retracement since 2020 is in the low double digits, depending on intraday comparisons to intermediate peaks. Second, the CNBC piece (Mar 24, 2026) records that multiple market veterans continue to assert long-term $10,000-per-ounce scenarios, a projection roughly five times the 2020 high and orders of magnitude above current spot levels. Third, central-bank policy rates, which rose from near-zero in 2021 to materially positive levels by 2023–2024, remain a structural input to forward gold valuations (Federal Reserve;ECB;BoE reported policies).
Beyond headline numbers, flow and derivatives metrics show nuanced signals. Open interest in COMEX gold futures and net positioning in the Commitment of Traders report suggest that speculative long positions were reduced through late 2025 into early 2026, while dealer inventories and mint sales presented episodic demand but not the sustained buying necessary to arrest price falls. ETF holdings across major providers declined in aggregate over several reporting weeks, a data point consistent with retail and some institutional rebalancing away from bullion exposure. Comparatively, Bitcoin and certain long-duration equities displayed divergent behavior — Bitcoin, for example, has shown both higher volatility and different correlation patterns to macro drivers versus gold over the past 24 months.
One useful comparative lens is year-on-year performance. Gold’s year-on-year return has lagged broader risk assets in multiple recent 12-month windows, whereas real assets like select base metals outperformed during periods of synchronized global growth. Against peers in the safe-haven bucket, gold still commands a larger central-bank buyer base than silver or platinum, which tempers the downside but does not immunize it from cyclical corrections. Sources: LBMA, COMEX, ETF filings, CNBC (Mar 24, 2026).
Sector Implications
The mining sector is directly exposed to the gold price cycle and exhibits differentiated sensitivity by cost structure and balance-sheet strength. High-grade, low-cost producers retain cash-generation flexibility at lower prices; several North American and Australian majors have balance sheets with cash buffers and hedging programs that reduce near-term production risk. Conversely, junior miners and exploration companies, which often rely on capital markets, face funding stress when spot prices decline and risk premia spike, potentially slowing new project development and M&A activity. For investors allocating to equities, the discrepancy between cash-flow resilience of majors and the solvency risk of juniors is a critical filter.
For bullion-backed products and physical holdings, redemptions can create transient price dislocations if market makers need to liquidate inventories into thin spot liquidity. Institutional allocators using futures and options face margining and convexity effects; short-term drawdowns can produce forced selling if portfolios are levered or if margin thresholds are breached. From a currency-hedging perspective, dollar strength amplifies losses for non-dollar investors unless currency offsets are maintained. Importantly, central-bank purchases of gold, which have been notable in several EM economies since 2018, provide a strategic buyer base that structurally supports demand but does not necessarily prevent short-term price corrections.
ETF and passive exposure mechanisms will likely re-price flows if volatility persists: product sponsors may widen creation/redemption spreads, and liquidity providers could demand higher compensation. For corporate treasuries and sovereign wealth funds, the current period reframes asset-allocation questions about role sizing for non-yielding stores of value versus income-producing assets. See related institutional perspectives on [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and our sector analysis on [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
Risk Assessment
Several risk vectors could extend pressure on gold. The primary risk is real rates rising further than consensus, which would increase the gold opportunity cost and likely prompt additional selling pressure; markets have shown sensitivity to both nominal and real-yield surprises. A second risk is a sustained appreciation of the U.S. dollar driven by a renewed growth differential or sudden risk-off repricing; historically, dollar appreciation correlates inversely with dollar-denominated commodity prices. Third, policy normalization that tightens global liquidity beyond current expectations could reduce carry and speculative appetite for non-yielding assets.
Conversely, event-driven upside risks remain credible. Geopolitical shocks, systemic banking stress, or disinflationary policy failures could restore gold's safe-haven premium rapidly. Inflation surprises higher than expectations would also materially alter the calculus for long-duration, non-yielding assets. Another often-underappreciated risk is structural demand from sovereigns and EM central banks: if the pace of official sector buying accelerates, it could absorb supply and dramatically tighten physical markets.
Portfolio-level risks include liquidity mismatches and convexity effects in futures markets during stress periods. Institutional participants using derivatives should model margin and basis risk across scenarios that include both higher real yields and sudden spikes in volatility. For miners, operational risks (capex delays, permitting, input-cost inflation) compound price risk and can create asymmetric downside for smaller issuers.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views the coexistence of short-term bearishness and long-term hyper-bullish narratives as a reflection of different time-horizon priors and scenario weightings, not a contradiction of market logic. The $10,000-per-ounce forecast highlighted in CNBC (Mar 24, 2026) is mathematically feasible in tail inflation or monetary-loss scenarios, but it implies structural outcomes — sustained hyperinflation, collapse of fiat confidence, or extreme currency debasement — that carry meaningful social and economic dislocations. For most institutional portfolios, a probabilistic approach that assigns small but non-zero weights to extreme scenarios is prudent, combined with explicit sizing rules that prevent overconcentration in single-outcome bets.
A contrarian yet pragmatic insight: tactical underweight to gold amid a bear phase can make sense for investors with liquid alternatives and high conviction in rate normalization, but absolute avoidance risks under-allocating to a real-asset hedge when geopolitical or inflation shocks re-emerge. We favor diversified exposures across bullion, producers with strong cash profiles, and selective derivatives to express views without excessive tail risk. This stance is consistent with our broader macro view that markets will oscillate between inflationary and disinflationary regimes over multi-year cycles, and that gold's role as a portfolio diversifier will vary with those cycles. For institutional readers seeking deeper procedural guidance, see our institutional frameworks and insights on [topic](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en).
FAQ
Q: How often has gold entered bear markets historically, and what preceded those moves?
A: Historically, gold has experienced several multi-month corrections; notable drawdowns include post-2011 weakness and the 2013 selloff. These selloffs were typically preceded by rising real yields, dollar strength, and shifts in investor positioning. Institutional investors should analyze the macro drivers and positioning indicators (e.g., ETF flows, COMEX positioning) rather than focusing solely on percentage thresholds.
Q: If gold is in a bear market, what conditions would likely mark the start of a sustained bull phase?
A: A sustained bull phase would likely require either a significant decline in real yields (through lower nominal rates or higher inflation), a marked deterioration in macro outlook prompting safe-haven demand, or a structural uptick in central-bank purchases. Historically, combinations of rising inflation expectations and declining real yields have been powerful catalysts for multi-year gold rallies.
Bottom Line
Gold's bear-market characterization reflects near-term re-pricing driven by higher real yields and dollar strength, but structural buyers and tail-risk scenarios sustain the plausibility of very large long-term forecasts. Institutional allocation decisions should reconcile probabilistic scenario weighting with explicit sizing rules rather than binary positioning.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
