Gold Hits $4,730/oz — The Paradox of the 'Safest Asset' Forged by America's Debt Bomb
Spot gold is trading at $4,730 per ounce. U.S. debt exceeding $36 trillion, central bank purchases of 1,237 tonnes annually, and a weakening dollar are all converging. JPMorgan targets $5,000 and Morgan Stanley targets $5,200.

- Spot gold hit $4,730/oz, up 55% in 2025, driven by U.S
- debt fears and central bank buying
- JPMorgan targets $5,000 and Morgan Stanley $5,200, with structural demand underpinning the floor
Central banks net purchased 1,237 tonnes in 2025. JPMorgan targets $5,000 by year-end; Morgan Stanley targets $5,200.
Spot gold is currently trading at approximately $4,730 per ounce. Having surged 55% in 2025 and breaching $4,000 for the first time, the rally has continued into 2026.
Tariff uncertainty, diminishing appeal of U.S. Treasuries, and structural central bank buying are all operating simultaneously.
Russia's 2022 Asset Freeze Changed Everything
The turning point was 2022. When the United States froze Russia's dollar-denominated assets, foreign central banks were jolted. It became clear that the U.S. could freeze any country's assets at will.
Foreign central banks began selling U.S. Treasuries and rotating into gold.
- Prior 10-year average: ~200 tonnes purchased annually
- 2022–2025 annual average: ~1,000 tonnes purchased
- 2025 full year: 1,237 tonnes net purchased
- People's Bank of China official holdings: record 2,309 tonnes in Q1 2026
U.S. Debt Has Become Gold's Fuel — A Vicious Cycle
U.S. federal debt surpassed $36 trillion as of early 2026. The annual fiscal deficit runs at approximately $1.8–2.2 trillion.
The concern is that interest costs on this debt have become the second-largest expenditure item in the U.S. budget, trailing only Social Security.
As foreign investors rapidly dumped Treasuries, the U.S. was effectively pushed toward monetizing its own debt — a dynamic that feeds dollar weakness and inflationary pressure, which in turn stimulates gold demand, creating a vicious cycle.
Moody's recently downgraded the U.S. credit rating, meaning America has now lost its top-tier rating from all three major credit agencies.
Central Banks Buy More on Dips — The Structural Case for a Price Floor
The core of the gold bull thesis lies in central bank buying patterns.
Countries like Poland, which have set gold reserve targets, must continue buying regardless of whether gold is at $4,000 or $5,000. In fact, price dips are viewed as buying opportunities. Unlike hedge funds or retail investors, they do not panic-sell on price declines.
The World Gold Council (WGC) projects central bank purchases of 750–850 tonnes in 2026, providing structural price support.
Central banks buy to meet allocation targets, not price targets. They don't sell on dips — they buy more. This one-directional demand creates a structural price floor.
Wall Street Price Targets — JPMorgan $5,000, Morgan Stanley $5,200
- Morgan Stanley: $5,200 (based on geopolitical tensions and U.S. rate environment)
- JPMorgan Global Research: Expects gold to breach $5,000 in Q4 2026, with long-term potential toward $6,000
- BNP Paribas: $6,000 scenario within the year
JPMorgan expects combined quarterly investor and central bank demand to hold at approximately 585 tonnes.
The Bottom Line
Gold has traditionally been called an asset that 'does nothing' — no interest, no dividends. Yet as the premise of U.S. Treasuries as the risk-free asset comes into question, gold is moving in to fill that role.
With structural central bank buying, the U.S. debt vicious cycle, Middle East geopolitical risk, and dollar weakness all operating in tandem, the argument that "there is more upside ahead" is gaining credibility.
Frequently Asked Questions
Gold has already rallied significantly — is it too late to buy?
Major Wall Street institutions — JPMorgan, Morgan Stanley, and BNP Paribas — still see further upside. That said, short-term volatility remains elevated; there were single-day drops of 3.9% as recently as February 2025. For long-term hedging purposes, a dollar-cost averaging approach is the conventional strategy.
Why does central bank gold buying push prices higher?
Central banks buy to meet reserve allocation targets, not price targets. They don't sell on dips — they buy more. This one-directional demand creates a structural price floor. Poland, China, India, and Turkey are among the most prominent buyers.
What happens to gold prices when the dollar strengthens?
Conventionally, a stronger dollar is a headwind for gold. However, in the current environment, dollar weakness and central bank demand are operating simultaneously, leading to unusual periods where both the dollar and gold have risen together.
What is the difference between gold ETFs and physical gold?
Gold ETFs such as GLD and IAU track the spot price of gold and trade like stocks. Physical gold eliminates counterparty risk but incurs storage and insurance costs. ETFs are generally preferred for short-term trading, while physical gold suits long-term hedging.
What are the investment options for Korean investors looking to gain gold exposure?
There are four main channels: direct trading on the KRX Gold Market (accessible with small amounts, exempt from capital gains tax); gold savings accounts (goldbanking); domestic ETFs such as KODEX Gold Futures (132030); and direct purchases of U.S.-listed ETFs like GLD or IAU. For currency gain exposure, U.S. ETFs are more efficient; for pure domestic exposure, the KRX Gold Market is the cleaner option.
Smart Money Briefing
Weekly summaries of Wall Street guru moves and crypto whale activity.









