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    Home » Why Investors are Trading Gold for Yield
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    Why Investors are Trading Gold for Yield

    Adnan AdamsBy Adnan AdamsMarch 24, 2026No Comments15 Views
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    By Adnan Adams Mohammed;

    Financial and Economic Journalist

    For centuries, gold has been the undisputed “safe havens” for investors.

    When the world trembles be it from war, inflation, or political upheaval investors have traditionally sprinted toward the yellow metal. But as we cross the first quarter of 2026, a strange phenomenon is unfolding in the global markets: gold is retreating precisely when the headlines say it should be soaring.

    The precious metal has recently endured its longest losing streak in years, with prices sliding below the US$4,700 mark. This downward spiral comes despite a backdrop of geopolitical tension and energy shocks that would, in any other era, have sent bullion prices to the moon.

    The “higher for longer” shadow

    The primary antagonist in gold’s current drama is not a lack of demand, but the “Iron Grip” of global central banks. The U.S. Federal Reserve, alongside its peers in Europe and Asia, has signaled a hawkish stance that few saw coming at the start of the year.

    With oil prices hovering above US$100 per barrel due to ongoing Middle Eastern instability, inflation has proven stickier than anticipated. Consequently, central banks are refusing to blink. By signaling that interest rate cuts are “off the table” for the foreseeable future, they have increased the “opportunity cost” of holding gold.

    “Gold doesn’t pay a dividend or an interest rate,” explains one senior market analyst. “When you can get a guaranteed 4% or 5% return on government bonds because central banks are keeping rates high, the ‘shiny rock’ in your vault starts to look a lot less attractive, no matter how much trouble is brewing globally.”

    The inflation paradox

    The current market presents a fascinating paradox. Traditionally, gold is a hedge against inflation. However, in 2026, inflation is actually hurting gold. This is because modern markets view high inflation not as a reason to buy gold, but as a reason for the Federal Reserve to get aggressive. The stronger the inflation data, the more likely the Fed is to hike rates or keep them elevated, which in turn strengthens the U.S. Dollar. Since gold is priced in dollars, a “Super-Greenback” makes the metal more expensive for international buyers, further dampening demand.

    A technical reset?

    Despite the gloom, many analysts argue this is a “healthy correction” rather than a collapse. Earlier in 2026, gold hit a staggering all-time high of US$5,595 per ounce. The current slide, while painful for short-term traders, is being viewed by institutional giants like J.P. Morgan and Goldman Sachs as a necessary reset.

    “The structural bull case for gold isn’t dead,” says a report from Fitch Solutions. “Central banks in emerging markets are still buying gold at record levels to diversify away from the dollar. What we are seeing now is the ‘speculative froth’ being blown off the top.”

    The road ahead

    For the average investor in Ghana and abroad, the next 30 to 60 days will be critical. If central banks begin to see a cooling in energy prices, they may soften their tone, providing the “oxygen” gold needs to rally again.

    Until then, the Gilded King remains in retreat, proving that even the world’s oldest currency is not immune to the relentless math of modern monetary policy. In 2026, it seems, the “Safe Haven” has a new landlord: the Central Bank Policy Rate.

     

     

     

     

    Gold prices Inflation Middle East war
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