What Drives Gold Prices? — 10 Key Factors Explained
Gold prices don't move randomly. They respond to a complex web of economic, political, and market forces. Understanding these drivers helps you anticipate price movements and make better investment decisions.
1. US Dollar Strength
Gold is priced in USD globally. When the dollar weakens, gold becomes cheaper for foreign buyers, increasing demand and pushing prices up. When the dollar strengthens, the opposite happens.
Rule of thumb: Gold and the US Dollar Index (DXY) have an inverse correlation of roughly -0.80 over the long term. See how gold prices convert to other currencies with our Currency Converter.
2. Interest Rates
Gold pays no interest or dividends. When real interest rates (nominal rates minus inflation) are high, investors prefer yield-bearing assets like bonds. When real rates are low or negative, gold becomes more attractive.
Bullish for Gold
Rate cuts, negative real rates, dovish Fed
Bearish for Gold
Rate hikes, high real rates, hawkish Fed
3. Inflation
Gold is the classic inflation hedge. When prices rise and currencies lose purchasing power, gold tends to hold its value. In the 1970s stagflation, gold rose from $35 to $850 — a 2,300% gain.
However, gold responds more to inflation expectations than actual inflation. If markets expect future inflation, gold moves before the CPI data confirms it.
4. Geopolitical Risk
Wars, sanctions, political instability, and trade conflicts drive investors to gold as a safe haven. Major geopolitical events and their gold price impact:
Russia-Ukraine conflict (2022)
Gold surged to $2,070
COVID-19 pandemic (2020)
Gold hit all-time high of $2,075
US-China trade war (2019)
Gold rose 18% in 6 months
Brexit vote (2016)
Gold jumped 8% overnight
9/11 attacks (2001)
Gold spiked 6% in one day
5. Central Bank Buying
Central banks hold over 35,000 tonnes of gold in reserves. When they buy, it creates massive demand; when they sell, it adds supply. Since 2010, central banks have been net buyers every year.
Top buyers in recent years: China (PBOC), Poland, India (RBI), Turkey, and Singapore. The trend toward de-dollarization has accelerated central bank gold purchases since 2022.
6. Supply and Demand
Supply (~4,800 tonnes/year)
- Mine production: ~3,600 tonnes
- Recycled gold: ~1,200 tonnes
- Top producers: China, Australia, Russia, Canada
Demand (~4,800 tonnes/year)
- Jewelry: ~50%
- Investment (bars, coins, ETFs): ~25%
- Central banks: ~15%
- Technology/industry: ~10%
7. ETF Flows
Gold ETFs (like GLD and IAU) hold physical gold in vaults. When investors buy ETF shares, the fund buys gold — creating demand. When investors sell, the fund sells gold — creating supply. ETF inflows and outflows are a leading indicator of price direction.
8. Mining Costs
The all-in sustaining cost (AISC) of mining gold averages around $1,300–$1,400/oz globally. This creates a soft floor — if gold drops below mining costs for extended periods, miners cut production, reducing supply and eventually supporting prices.
9. Seasonal Patterns
Gold shows recurring seasonal patterns driven by cultural and economic events:
Often strong — new year portfolio rebalancing, Chinese New Year buying
Historically strong — Indian wedding/festival season begins (Diwali, Dhanteras)
Often weaker — post-New Year lull
Mixed — holiday jewelry demand vs. year-end profit taking
10. Crypto & Alternative Assets
Bitcoin is sometimes called "digital gold." When crypto markets boom, some capital that might have gone to gold flows into Bitcoin instead. However, the correlation is weak — gold and crypto serve different purposes for most investors.
Gold remains the preferred safe haven for institutional investors, central banks, and conservative portfolios. Crypto appeals to risk-tolerant investors seeking higher returns.
Track how these factors affect the price in real time on our live gold price page, view futures contracts for forward pricing, or check gold in your local currency with the Currency Converter.