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Mining and Metailurgy

Wednesday
23 Apr 2025

JP Morgan See Gold Prices Crossing $4,000/Oz by Q2 2026

23 Apr 2025  by Reuters   
JP Morgan forecasts gold prices to surpass $4,000 per ounce by the second quarter of 2026, with an average of $3,675 per ounce expected by the fourth quarter of 2025. This projection, outlined in a note released on Tuesday, reflects increased demand driven by economic uncertainties. The bank suggests that stronger-than-expected demand could push prices higher sooner than anticipated.


Gold bars are stacked in the safe deposit boxes room of the Pro Aurum gold house in Munich, Germany, January 10, 2025.

The bank attributes the upward trend to robust demand from investors and central banks, averaging approximately 710 tonnes per quarter this year. It stated: "Underpinning our forecast for gold prices heading towards $4,000/oz next year is continued strong investor and central bank gold demand averaging around 710 tonnes a quarter on net this year."

Spot gold prices, which rose 29% this year, reached $3,500 per ounce for the first time on Tuesday, marking the 28th record high in 2025. Earlier this month, Goldman Sachs revised its gold price forecast for the end of 2025 to $3,700 per ounce, up from $3,300, noting that in extreme scenarios, prices could approach $4,500 per ounce by year-end.

A potential decline in gold prices could occur if central bank demand unexpectedly weakens, according to JP Morgan. Additionally, sustained U.S. economic growth resilient to trade challenges might lead to tighter monetary policies, reducing gold’s appeal. The bank explained: "More materially bearish would be a scenario where U.S. economic growth remains extremely resilient to tariffs allowing the Fed to turn much more proactive in fighting inflation risks, prompting markets to price in hikes even before worrying inflation actually arrives."

For silver, JP Morgan anticipates short-term challenges due to uncertainties in industrial demand. However, it expects silver prices to increase to $39 per ounce by the end of 2025, with stronger momentum projected for the second half of the year.

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