This article from Affärsvärlden reports on the latest monthly commentary from AuAg Funds on developments in the gold market. It sets out AuAg’s view that gold became heavily oversold following June's decline and reviews the macroeconomic factors they believe are shaping the outlook – including the strength of the US dollar, rising government debt and monetary policy.
The piece also covers central banks' continued gold purchases during 2026. Readers interested in what drives movements in the gold price will find context for the current market discussion.
Valuable Insights:
- Sharp pullbacks are a normal part of long-running bull markets: after an extended rise, corrections of 20–30% are common, so a steep monthly decline does not by itself mean the underlying trend has turned.
- Gold tends to be driven less by short-term price swings than by the broader macroeconomic and fiscal backdrop — government debt, budget deficits, the dollar and the direction of monetary policy all shape its longer-term path.
- Central banks keep accumulating gold not for yield but because it carries no counterparty risk and cannot be frozen or used as leverage by another government, which is what underpins its role as a reserve asset.