NEW YORK, Dec. 27, 2025, 11:59 a.m. ET — Market closed
Gold is heading into the final week of 2025 near historic highs after a powerful, late-December surge across precious metals—one that has been amplified by thin holiday liquidity, expectations for U.S. interest-rate cuts in 2026, and renewed safe-haven demand tied to geopolitics.
In the latest U.S. trading session on Friday, spot gold rose 1.2% to about $4,531.41 an ounce in afternoon trade after touching an all-time high of $4,549.71, according to Reuters. COMEX gold futures for February delivery settled 1.1% higher at $4,552.70. [1]
Gold’s record run is part of a broader precious-metals breakout
Gold’s move has not been happening in isolation. Silver pushed deeper into record territory, helping pull more capital into the complex as investors chased momentum and diversification late in the year.
On Friday, Reuters reported spot silver jumped to an all-time high near $77.40 and was up about 7.5% in afternoon U.S. trading, while platinum also hit a record high. Reuters also flagged the scale of 2025’s rally: silver up roughly 167% year to date versus gold’s 72% gain, with platinum also notching an outsized move. [2]
Another Reuters report described silver rising as much as 9% to a record $78.53, underscoring the intensity of the year-end chase. [3]
The stock market backdrop: a quiet Friday near record levels
Because U.S. markets are closed for the weekend, investors are digesting Friday’s post-Christmas session and recalibrating for the final few trading days of the year.
Wall Street ended Friday only marginally lower in light volume, with the Dow slipping 0.04%, the S&P 500 down 0.03%, and the Nasdaq lower by 0.09%, Reuters reported. Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group, said the market was “catching our breath” after a strong run and noted that the “Santa Claus rally” window had just begun. [4]
That mix—equities hovering near highs while gold is also printing records—has become a defining feature of late 2025: investors have been willing to hold risk assets, but also pay up for hard-asset hedges as macro and political uncertainty persists. [5]
What’s driving gold right now
Several forces are converging:
1) Rate-cut expectations for 2026 (and policy uncertainty).
Markets have been increasingly focused on when the Federal Reserve might cut rates in 2026 and by how much. A Reuters market wrap noted traders were pricing in at least two cuts in 2026, though not expecting a move before June, with uncertainty heightened by speculation around the next Fed chair nomination timeline. [6]
2) U.S. dollar moves that mechanically support dollar-priced gold.
A weaker dollar tends to make gold cheaper for non-U.S. buyers. Reuters reported that a softer greenback helped push gold to a record around $4,549 on Friday, even as broader markets were muted. [7]
3) Thin holiday liquidity and year-end positioning.
With many desks lightly staffed and some global markets closed for holidays, price swings can become sharper than usual. CME Group noted February gold futures notched yet another record—its 50th all-time high of 2025, reaching $4,584—and described the move as the strongest weekly rally since October, shaped in part by fund-manager positioning and profit-taking dynamics. [8]
4) Geopolitics lifting safe-haven demand.
Reuters cited geopolitical tensions as a tailwind for precious metals, including developments around U.S. military actions that helped reinforce safe-haven flows. [9]
What analysts and strategists are saying
Even after the surge, some market watchers argue the trend is intact—while warning that year-end can bring abrupt pullbacks.
Peter Grant, vice president and senior metals strategist at Zaner Metals, told Reuters that thin markets are driving volatility and that some profit-taking risk remains into year-end—yet he still sees a strong underlying trend. He also laid out upside “next objective” levels for gold and a psychological milestone ahead. [10]
From a broader macro lens, Soojin Kim, a commodities analyst at MUFG, said in a note carried by Reuters that the rally could continue, citing major banks forecasting further gains into 2026, resilient physical demand, and persistent geopolitical and monetary uncertainty. [11]
Physical market signals: high prices can curb jewelry demand—even as strategic buying continues
Record prices can cool day-to-day retail demand, particularly in price-sensitive jewelry markets. Reuters reported that gold discounts in India widened to the highest level in more than six months as the price rally curbed buying, while discounts in China narrowed sharply from prior extremes—an indication that local conditions and price sensitivity are shifting as the rally matures. [12]
What investors should know before the next U.S. session
With the market closed today, attention shifts to what could move gold when trading resumes.
Watch the macro catalysts first.
The U.S. economic calendar will matter because rates and the dollar remain key inputs for gold pricing. One scheduled release to note: the National Association of REALTORS® says Pending Home Sales for November 2025 will be released Monday, Dec. 29 at 10 a.m. Eastern. [13]
Expect liquidity to stay thin into year-end.
Holiday conditions can exaggerate moves in both directions, especially if markets are positioned the same way (crowded longs can unwind fast). That dynamic has already been visible in the outsized daily ranges in precious metals described by Reuters and CME. [14]
Know the holiday schedule ahead.
Trading logistics can matter as portfolios rebalance into year-end. Investopedia reported U.S. stock traders will have a full trading day on New Year’s Eve (Wednesday, Dec. 31), while bond trading ends early at 2 p.m. ET, and both stock and bond markets are closed on Jan. 1, 2026 for New Year’s Day. [15]
Key levels and sentiment.
Psychological round numbers can become magnets in fast markets. For gold, the $4,500 area is now a major reference point after this week’s breakout, with traders balancing momentum against the risk of profit-taking into the turn of the year. [16]
Forecasts: where big banks see gold headed in 2026 and beyond
While short-term moves can be noisy, several major banks have kept a constructive stance on gold into 2026—often tying their outlooks to structural central-bank demand and the path of U.S. interest rates.
- Goldman Sachs said it sees gold climbing 14% to $4,900/oz by December 2026 in its base case, pointing to structurally high central-bank demand and cyclical support from potential Fed rate cuts. [17]
- Deutsche Bank raised its 2026 forecast to $4,450/oz and described a “positive structural picture,” highlighting central-bank buying and ETF investment absorbing supply; it also projected a $3,950–$4,950 range for 2026 and kept a 2027 forecast of $5,150. [18]
- J.P. Morgan forecast gold could average $5,055/oz by Q4 2026, with its analysts emphasizing the combination of investor demand and central-bank buying. Natasha Kaneva (J.P. Morgan’s head of global commodities strategy) called gold the bank’s “highest conviction long,” and Gregory Shearer (head of base & precious metals strategy) pointed to themes including rate cuts, stagflation anxiety, and hedging demand. [19]
Bottom line
Gold is entering the final stretch of 2025 with momentum firmly on its side after sprinting to fresh records alongside silver and platinum. The immediate setup—thin year-end liquidity, policy-rate expectations for 2026, and a dollar-sensitive bid—can keep volatility elevated in either direction. For the next session, investors will be watching the dollar, rates, and incoming U.S. data closely, while monitoring whether the post-holiday “Santa Claus rally” in equities extends—and whether gold can hold above the $4,500 psychological threshold after one of the most dramatic precious-metals years in decades. [20]
References
1. www.reuters.com, 2. www.reuters.com, 3. www.reuters.com, 4. www.reuters.com, 5. www.reuters.com, 6. www.channelnewsasia.com, 7. www.channelnewsasia.com, 8. www.cmegroup.com, 9. www.channelnewsasia.com, 10. www.reuters.com, 11. www.channelnewsasia.com, 12. www.reuters.com, 13. www.nar.realtor, 14. www.reuters.com, 15. www.investopedia.com, 16. www.reuters.com, 17. www.reuters.com, 18. www.reuters.com, 19. www.reuters.com, 20. www.reuters.com


