Morgan Stanley resets gold price target for rest of 2026
4 min readMorgan Stanley just revamped the gold story for the rest of 2026, telling investors to dial back expectations.
According to a report from the Economic Times, the bank just cut its second-half 2026 price target for the shiny yellow metal to $5,200 per ounce, down substantially from a bullish $5,700.
The revision follows a tough six-week sell-off that has completely changed the tone of the entire trade.
It’s important to note, however, that the updated price target represents robust upside from current levels.
According to Yahoo Finance, gold futures are trading in the high $4,700s to low $4,800s range, leaving room for considerable upside.
However, this isn’t an outright bearish call.
The bank still points to structural support from robust central bank demand, currency debasement concerns, and geopolitical tensions.
For perspective, China’s central bank added 5 tonnes in March, and the bank’s economists still expect a couple of 25-basis-point interest rate cuts this year, in September and December.
Morgan Stanley cuts gold price target for 2026 as yields rise and rate-cut hopes fade
Dario Pignatelli/Bloomberg via Getty Images
SPDR Gold Shares vs. the S&P 500 returnsOver the past 1 week, SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) returned -2.43%, compared with 2.23% for the S&P 500.Over the past 1 month, GLD returned 5.06%, compared with 9.47% for the S&P 500.Over the past 6 months, GLD returned 15.12%, compared with 5.76% for the S&P 500.Year to date, GLD returned 9.58%, compared with 4.05% for the S&P 500.Over the past 1 year, GLD returned 37.61%, compared with 38.09% for the S&P 500.Over the past 3 years, GLD returned 135.70%, compared with 72.32% for the S&P 500.
Source: Seeking Alpha.
Why gold stumbled in early 2026
Not too long ago, gold looked almost unstoppable.
More Gold & Silver
Bank of America has stark message for Silver investorsState Street declares gold must-hold assetHow much gold you should hold in your retirement portfolio
Before the Middle East conflict began in late February, the safe-haven metal traded at near-record levels, jumping to nearly $5,500 an ounce.
Then came a rough six-week reset.
Morgan Stanley highlighted that gold prices have tanked 8% since the conflict started, sliding into the low $4,800s.
The main reasons for the drop include higher oil prices stoking inflation fears, rising real yields, and fading hopes for near-term Fed rate cuts.
However, at the same time, we saw ETF selling pick up, while the central bank cooled off for the most part. On the flip side, stocks moved in the other direction as the S&P 500 pushed back above pre-conflict levels and notched fresh highs.
Why the gold story got harder for Morgan Stanley
Gold has lost its incredible near-term appeal, and Morgan Stanley argues that this is because the market is demanding a different kind of proof.
The bank feels the rally ran too far and too quickly, and that once we saw a shift in the macro backdrop, things turned swiftly.
Related: Bank of America has stark message for Silver investors
Put simply, gold stopped being a clear conviction bet and became an expensive asset that needed inch-perfect conditions to keep climbing.
Morgan Stanley says three forces did the real damage:
Official demand weakened.Turkey’s central bank sold 52 tonnes of gold between Feb. 27 and March 27, while India delayed some bullion import approvals. Moreover, other central banks also slowed the pace of buying, with January and February running at nearly 31 tonnes a month, compared with an average of 50 tonnes through 2025.ETF money reversed. ETFs scooped up 150 tonnes in January and February, then sold off 90 tonnes in March on the back of softening rate-cut hopes.The charts broke down. Gold dropped below its 50-day moving average, then the 100-day, triggering systematic selling. In fact, the World Gold Council reported consecutive ETF outflows from March 17, peaking at 14 tonnes on March 19.
At the same time, though, Morgan Stanley said that the shiny yellow metal has found support at its 200-day moving average.
Nevertheless, the next leg higher will likely come from actual Fed easing and calmer bond markets.
Wall Street’s latest price targets on goldWells Fargo Investment Institute: $6,100 to $6,300 by the end of 2026.J.P. Morgan: $6,300 by the fourth quarter of 2026.BNP Paribas: $5,620 average for 2026, with a peak above $6,250 possible by year-end.Commerzbank: $5,000 by year-end 2026.Macquarie Group: $4,323 average for 2026.Citi Research: $5,000 near-term price target.
Source: Reuters.
The next big tests for gold
As we look ahead, the next major tests for gold prices include the April jobs and CPI reports, as well as the Fed’s April 28-29 meeting minutes.
These events are important because gold has been trading a lot more like a rate-sensitive asset of late.
So if the numbers cool off, gold gets help, and if they stay hot, yields will continue doing the damage.
First up, the latest jobs reports showed 178,000 payroll gains in March and a 4.3% unemployment rate.
So, a weaker follow-up will likely revive rate-cut hopes, which then supports gold, but a firmer print might pressure Treasury yields.
CPI matters even more.
March inflation ran at a remarkably worrying 3.3% year-over-year, with core CPI numbers at 2.6% and the energy index up 12.5%.
A weaker April reading will likely be gold-friendly, easing fears of a prolonged higher-rate backdrop.
Then there’s the Fed.
Policymakers held rates at 3.5% to 3.75% in March, so the May 20 minutes will be critical for gauging whether they are getting comfortable with cuts or more worried about inflation.
Related: Bank of America sends clear message on Apple stock before earnings
#Morgan #Stanley #resets #gold #price #target #rest