Zusammenfassung:Following a selloff in U.S. Treasuries and Moodys downgrade of the U.S. sovereign credit rating, gold—long viewed as a traditional safe haven—has reemerged as a focal point for capital allocation. Thi
Following a selloff in U.S. Treasuries and Moodys downgrade of the U.S. sovereign credit rating, gold—long viewed as a traditional safe haven—has reemerged as a focal point for capital allocation. This event not only underscores mounting concerns over the sustainability of U.S. fiscal policy, but also highlights deep-rooted structural tensions between political gridlock and chronic budget deficits.
1. Spreading Fiscal Risk: Flight to Safety Amid Rate Pressures
Despite narrowly passing through the budget committee, Trumps proposed “One Big Beautiful Bill” revealed sharp divisions within the Republican Party, underscoring limited political will and capacity to rein in spending. If left unchecked, structural deficits may keep Treasury yields elevated for an extended period—raising debt servicing costs and bolstering the appeal of gold as a hedge.
Market chain reaction: Persistent deficits → Rising bond supply → Higher yields → Policy ineffectiveness risk → Gold as a hedge.
2. History Rhymes: Bond Market Volatility Drives Structural Gold Demand
Back in April, the U.S. introduced a “reciprocal tariff” policy that pushed 10-year Treasury yields to 4.5% and 30-year yields to 5%, triggering short-term panic. Today, Moody‘s downgrade has once again driven long-end yields to previous highs, signaling that markets are no strangers to fiscal-policy-debt dislocations. Gold’s role as a financial anchor is again in focus.
As 10-year yields climb, credit conditions tighten and consumer spending is weakened—signals that typically precede another wave of capital rotation into gold.
Three Key Risk Catalysts Supporting Gold Rebound:
Policy Uncertainty: While markets anticipate the start of a rate-cut cycle as early as September, the disconnect between strong data and dovish expectations has increased policy ambiguity and undermined confidence in the dollar and Treasuries—reinforcing golds dual role as both a hedge and a safety asset.
Treasury Market Imbalance: Ongoing Fed balance sheet reduction, coupled with foreign central banks reducing their U.S. bond holdings, is pressuring liquidity. As yields rise, golds debt-free nature makes it increasingly attractive.
Debt “Gray Rhino” Approaches: A massive $6.3 trillion in Treasuries is set to mature in June, posing a serious test of the markets rollover capacity. A failed rollover could spark systemic volatility, with gold serving as a preferred hedge against a liquidity crunch.
Conclusion:
We believe the long-term bullish thesis for gold is solidifying. In the face of unmanageable fiscal deficits, muddled forward guidance from the Fed, and increasing debt rollover uncertainty, golds status as a “risk-free safe haven” is becoming more pronounced. With Fed policy still unclear in 2025 and political risks on the rise, structural flows into gold are expected to continue.
[Gold Price Technical Outlook]
Gold has been trading in a consolidation range between $3,200 and $3,263, struggling to break above resistance over the past five days. The price remains above the 50-day moving average ($3,168), indicating a mildly bullish structure, though momentum has softened. A breakout above $3,300 could open the door to $3,438 and $3,500. However, a drop below $3,220 could test support at $3,200 and $3,168, with risk extending to $3,100. For now, gold remains in a consolidation phase, and traders should watch for a breakout in either direction.
Key Resistance: $3,248, $3,263, $3,400
Key Support: $3,200–$3,220
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