Gold investors were bracing for a familiar problem.

Higher real rates, a stronger dollar, and a Federal Reserve that could continue to hammer one of the year’s hottest trades.

For context, according to GoldPrice.org, gold is trading in the early $4,100s per ounce, still up an impressive 23% over the past year, while its 30-day performance is down roughly 1%

Bernstein analysts aren’t dismissing that risk, but the firm’s latest call on the shiny yellow metal might be changing in a way investors cannot ignore. Bernstein reset its gold price target following a steep pullback, pointing to a Fed-rate backdrop that might not be as damaging for the bullion as the market feared. 

The safe-haven metal has been punished by rising real yields, yet Bernstein still sees ample room for prices to recover, as central-bank demand remains robust and the Fed’s next move looks a lot less threatening than expected.

The question is whether gold’s sell-off was a warning or the revamp before another move higher.

Bernstein updated its gold target as Fed-rate expectations reshape bullion’s outlook.

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What Bernstein now sees for gold 

Bernstein’s new gold price target is a lot more interesting because it effectively carries a Fed-rate twist.

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According to Investing.com’s reporting, Bernstein adjusted its 2026 gold price target to $4,533 an ounce and set a second-half 2026 target of $4,375 an ounce

For context, earlier public reports put Bernstein’s 2026 view at $4,180 in January and $4,800 in February. 

The firm’s reasoning is that it is based on central-bank demand and a Fed that Bernstein surprisingly doesn’t expect to launch an aggressive rate-hike cycle.

Gold has had a rough Q2 as the old market rule returned. 

When real rates rise, gold tends to struggle, as it pays no interest, and that relationship was on display during the quarter, with real rates moving from 2% in early April to 2.28% in late June, while gold fell from $4,650 an ounce to around $4,000.

Though that backdrop calls for a little caution. Instead, Bernstein is still looking for gold to move higher in the second half.

The firm’s economists do not expect a higher Fed funds rate over the next 12 months, with the central bank potentially limited to no hikes or to only one or two.

That puts Bernstein at odds with a more cautious Wall Street read. 

For instance, Reuters reported that HSBC cut its 2026 and 2027 gold forecasts because of a more hawkish US monetary policy outlook and a stronger dollar.

Central banks give gold a floor, but inflation can still crack it 

Bernstein’s gold case rests on central bank support.

The firm pointed to the World Gold Council’s 2026 Central Bank Gold Reserves survey, showing that 89% of central banks expect global gold reserves to rise over the next 12 months, while a record 45% expect to increase their own holdings.

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Central-bank demand tends to be stickier than retail demand. ETF investors can sell when yields rise. Momentum traders often leave the trade when gold breaks technical levels, but reserve managers have other considerations, including dollar exposure, geopolitical risk, currency diversification, and long-term balance-sheet protection.

Nevertheless, the inflation risk remains. 

If inflation remains hot, the Fed will lean hawkish, raising rates and lifting real yields in the process, strengthening the dollar and making gold less appealing.

Latest Wall Street gold price targets

  • Morgan Stanley: $5,200/oz in H2 2026. Morgan Stanley argues that the shiny yellow metal needs stronger ETF inflows to make that target much more realistic.
  • Deutsche Bank: $4,800/oz by Q4 2026. Deutsche Bank slashed its second-half gold view, seeing $4,300/oz in Q3 before a snapback to $4,800/oz in Q4 as the Fed reprices and ongoing U.S. macro data pressures demand.
  • Goldman Sachs: $4,900/oz by end-2026. Goldman’s team pointed to sovereign demand and emerging-market central bank diversification in narrowing their price target.
  • Bank of America: $4,800/oz by Q4 2026. BofA slashed its near-term target as investor demand slowed down and Fed-related headwinds intensified.
  • UBS: $5,200/oz over the next 12 months.UBS feels gold could rebound as markets price in the effects of the Fed policy, dollar pressure, and central bank buying.
    Sources: Reuters, Business Insider, Investing.com, JPMorgan Global Research, and Kitco, cited notes from Morgan Stanley and Bank of America.

The Fed risk is getting harder for gold bulls to ignore

It’s safe to say that over the past few weeks, Fed signaling has turned a lot more hostile.

For instance, the newly released June Fed minutes, the first under Chair Kevin Warsh, showed a central bank split but clearly worried about inflation. According to AP, half of the 18 policymakers who submitted projections supported raising rates by year-end, while the other half favored holding steady or cutting. 

A few officials even saw a case for hiking at the June meeting before the Fed ultimately held rates at 3.6%.

On the flip side, Warsh hasn’t sounded eager to validate hopes of a rate cut. Reuters reported that he would stick firmly to the Fed’s 2% inflation target and “disappoint” anyone expecting loose monetary policy, while also avoiding forward guidance. 

Moreover, it seems Wall Street has also moved that way, too. I covered recently that BofA now expects three 25-basis-point hikes in September, October, and December, while Deutsche Bank also expects two hikes this year. 

On top of that, Reuters said markets lifted the implied probability of a 2026 hike to nearly 87%, as oil shocks and inflation risks continue pushing yields higher.

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