Key Takeaways
- Gold fell to $4,156 on June 19, its third straight weekly loss amid Fed rate hike bets.
- Goldman Sachs cut its 2026 gold target to $4,900 from $5,400 on June 13-20 data.
- Lawrence Lepard says bitcoin could reach $1 million as debt concerns build for years.
Spot gold opened the week near $4,214 per ounce on June 13. Prices climbed as high as $4,330 to $4,380 by midweek on optimism around a U.S.-Iran truce deal involving President Trump. The rally reversed sharply after the Fed signaled it could raise rates later in 2026, sending gold down to $4,151 to $4,173 by June 19 and 20.
The pullback marks a roughly 3.4% weekly loss and extends a broader June correction that has pulled gold down about 8.5% for the month. Gold remains about 23% higher than a year ago but sits well below its January 2026 record of roughly $5,608 per ounce.
Dollar Strength Weighs on Gold
The U.S. dollar climbed to its highest level in 13 months during the week. A stronger dollar makes gold more expensive for holders of other currencies and typically reduces demand for the metal alongside other assets.
Higher Treasury yields added pressure too. Investors who hold non-yielding assets like gold face a higher opportunity cost when yields rise, and that dynamic played out through the back half of the week.
Fed Signals Hawkish Tilt
The Federal Reserve held its target rate steady around 3.5% to 3.75% but pointed to the possibility of additional hikes later this year. Acting Fed leadership tied to Kevin Warsh emphasized price stability in recent commentary, and markets responded by raising the odds of a rate increase as soon as September.
Hot inflation data added to the case. May consumer prices rose 4.2% year over year, the highest reading since 2023. Gold closed below its 200-day moving average for a sustained period for the first time since late 2023, a technical signal some traders watch as a marker of weakening long-term momentum.
Silver fell harder than gold during the same stretch, dropping to around $64.90 by June 19 with monthly losses near 14%.
Analysts Split on What Comes Next
Goldman Sachs lowered its year-end 2026 gold target to $4,900 per ounce from $5,400, citing delayed Fed rate cuts and softer demand for gold-backed exchange-traded funds (ETFs). Trading Economics models point to gold near $4,162 by the end of the second quarter, with a 12-month projection around $4,527.
Frank Giustra, speaking with Kitco News anchor Jeremy Szafron this week, described the pullback as a normal correction rather than the end of the gold bull market. He argued that central banks, not retail speculators, drove gold from around $1,800 to its record highs, and that those buyers have not stopped purchasing.
Giustra is a Canadian mining financier and entrepreneur known for building, funding, and combining major gold and natural resource companies, including Wheaton River Minerals/Goldcorp and Leagold Mining/Equinox Gold. He currently serves as the head of the Fiore Group.
Giustra pointed to central bank reserve diversification away from the dollar, accelerated in his view by the freezing of Russian reserves, along with efforts by China and other BRICS nations to build payment systems outside the dollar network. He expects mining stocks to eventually catch up to bullion and predicted more mergers among mining companies as producers search for new deposits.
Lawrence Lepard, in a separate interview with Szafron this week, offered a similar read. He tied gold’s rise from around $3,000 to more than $5,500 to growing recognition that U.S. government deficits will likely be financed through monetary expansion rather than spending cuts. Lepard said he would change his bullish view only if governments became fiscally disciplined, which he called unlikely.
Lepard is a well-known professional investment manager, sound money advocate, and author of “The Big Print,” who runs Equity Management Associates and focuses on bitcoin and gold/silver mining investments.
While chatting with Szafron this week, Lepard described gold and silver investor positioning as still in the “third inning” of a longer cycle, noting that most capital remains concentrated in AI and technology stocks rather than precious metals.
Bitcoin Enters the Conversation
Lepard, who holds both gold and bitcoin, called bitcoin’s fixed 21 million supply a form of digital scarcity that complements gold’s physical scarcity. He said the current bitcoin pullback looks mild compared with past cycles that saw drawdowns of 70% or more, which he views as a sign of growing institutional support.
He laid out long-term projections measured in decades, including a potential move from roughly $100,000 to $1 million and eventually toward $10 million, and said he believes holding zero bitcoin is a mistake given its risk-reward profile.
What to Watch
Traders are watching for further data on inflation, jobs, and Fed commentary, along with any follow-through on the U.S.-Iran agreement. Analysts pointed to support near $4,000 to $4,100 as the next level to monitor if the correction continues.








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