BARCLAYS says the gold sell-off tied to the Middle East conflict is a market
reset rather than a structural reversal. The bank attributes the drop to three
factors: a sharp dollar rally, a 10% rise in the S&P 500 that pulled risk
capital out of defensive assets, and concentrated positions that accelerated
liquidations. Barclays estimates the combined impact of dollar strength and a
10% S&P rally explained about a 10% fall in gold; the remainder reflects
position unwinds. Spot gold is trading near Barclays' fair-value estimate of
$4,150/oz. The bank retains $4,791/oz for 2026 and $4,900/oz for 2027 but warns
of near-term downside risk relative to fair value. Structural bullish
drivers—persistent inflation, policy uncertainty and central-bank reserve
diversification—are slow-moving and did not support prices during the acute
phase. Barclays estimates each 1ppt rise in inflation raises gold by roughly 5%
and says a sustained rebound hinges on renewed dollar weakness and the
resumption of steady central-bank purchases.