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Gold
Commodities

When Will Gold Reach $5,000? Three Key Factors to Watch

Dilin Wu
Dilin Wu
Research Strategist
21 Jan 2026
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In just three weeks of 2026, gold has consecutively broken through $4,700 and $4,800, setting new record highs. Market attention focuses on when gold will test $5,000, with safe-haven demand, institutional uncertainty, and rate-cut expectations as the main drivers.

After only three weeks into 2026, gold has already sent a clear signal: this rally is not a short-lived spike, but a redefinition of the market’s pricing range. Following the previous day’s breakthrough of $4,700, spot gold continued its ascent on January 21, successfully surpassing $4,800 per ounce, once again hitting a record high.

XAUUSD_2026-01-21.png

With such strong upward momentum, the market naturally asks: how long until gold tests $5,000? If it reaches this key round number, will it be able to hold and establish new support?

Gold’s Momentum: Strong Short-Term Push, Solid Long-Term Support

Gold’s recent surge shows clear momentum-driven characteristics, while medium- to long-term fundamental and structural factors continue to underpin prices.

From a technical perspective, gold has consecutively broken through $4,700 and $4,800 with minimal pullbacks, reflecting exceptionally strong buying interest. Short-term speculative flows and safe-haven capital have jointly propelled prices higher, sustaining a strong and continuous upward trend.

Meanwhile, its safe-haven appeal remains a critical support. Global geopolitical tensions continue to rise, trade frictions between the U.S. and Europe persist, and policy uncertainties around the Fed increase gold’s relative attractiveness versus risk assets.

At the same time, medium- and long-term bullish factors remain solid. The de-dollarization trend has driven central banks to continue accumulating gold, the Fed remains in a rate-cut cycle, global economic growth is slowing, and ETF and physical demand stay robust—together, these factors stabilize the price base.

Unlike past rallies driven mainly by rate-cut expectations, dollar fluctuations, or isolated geopolitical events, gold has now become an insurance asset within a complex macro environment, protecting credit systems, monetary systems, and geopolitical order. This means gold’s rise no longer depends on “perfect data”; as long as uncertainty persists, prices naturally extend higher.

Under this logic, $5,000 is not out of reach—it is a reasonable extension within the current pricing framework.

Gold Eyeing $5,000: Three Key Conditions

So, is $5,000 a realistic target or an overly optimistic fantasy? In other words, what events or expectations does the market need to push gold from $4,800 to $5,000?

I believe there are three key conditions to watch:

1. Sustained Safe-Haven Demand

Recent gains in gold carry a clear safe-haven tone, but to truly challenge $5,000, demand for safety must be persistent rather than a temporary sentiment rebound.

If another TACO moment occurs and geopolitical risks quickly ease in the coming weeks, prompting safe-haven flows back into equities and bonds, gold’s upward momentum may weaken significantly.

Conversely, if new geopolitical catalysts continue to emerge, even temporary rebounds in risk assets are unlikely to trigger large outflows from gold, as investors prefer “smaller but safer gains.” As long as markets cannot clearly price geopolitical developments, marginal buying pressure in gold will persist.

2. Rising Institutional Uncertainty

One of gold’s core values is its role as insurance against institutional and credit system risks. If markets increasingly question central bank independence, worry about the politicization of monetary policy, or lose faith in forward guidance, gold’s safe-haven role is significantly reinforced. It doesn’t need to yield interest—it only needs to remain “reliable and unmanipulated.”

Similarly, if fiscal deficits become the norm and debt issues are continually rolled over rather than resolved, gold becomes the “ultimate asset not reliant on external backstops.”

Should macro uncertainty escalate beyond minor fluctuations—such as sudden policy shifts, deteriorating fiscal conditions, or shocks to confidence in the monetary system—funds previously allocated rationally may increasingly rotate into gold, creating an insurance-driven reallocation.

3. Strengthened Rate-Cut Expectations

Beyond short-term shocks, one of the most direct factors affecting gold prices is real interest rates.

When U.S. inflation is relatively controlled, the most effective way to lower the opportunity cost of holding gold is for the market to price in stronger rate-cut expectations. If labor market data softens or Fed policy tilts more dovishly, investors will expect lower future rates, giving gold further upside potential.

Any two of these three factors strengthening simultaneously would give gold greater confidence to test $5,000.

A Test Is Likely, but Holding $5,000 Won’t Be Easy

Overall, from short-term surges to medium- and long-term trends, bullish factors are already abundant, making $5,000 a reasonable target. However, reaching $5,000 does not guarantee immediate stability.

The reason is simple: $5,000 is a highly emotional and symbolically significant round number. Both technical traders and long-term bulls may choose to reduce positions, wait, or even trade against the trend at this level. Volatility could therefore intensify, and market divergence may become pronounced.

Thus, the key question is not whether gold can hit $5,000, but whether it can be supported after reaching that level. If pullbacks are limited and short-lived, it may indicate that the price base is rising, paving the way for the next phase of gains.

The material provided here has not been prepared in accordance with legal requirements designed to promote the independence of investment research and as such is considered to be a marketing communication. Whilst it is not subject to any prohibition on dealing ahead of the dissemination of investment research we will not seek to take any advantage before providing it to our clients.

Pepperstone doesn’t represent that the material provided here is accurate, current or complete, and therefore shouldn’t be relied upon as such. The information, whether from a third party or not, isn’t to be considered as a recommendation; or an offer to buy or sell; or the solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any security, financial product or instrument; or to participate in any particular trading strategy. It does not take into account readers’ financial situation or investment objectives. We advise any readers of this content to seek their own advice. Without the approval of Pepperstone, reproduction or redistribution of this information isn’t permitted.

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