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JP Morgan Sees Gold Hitting $6,000 as Rally Shows No Signs of Exhaustion

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Gold has surged 65% in 2025 to around $4,350 per ounce, its best performance since 1979. JP Morgan expects the rally to continue toward $5,000 next year, with a potential path to $6,000 as central banks and investors pile into the precious metal.

Remember when gold broke $3,000 an ounce back in March? That felt like a big deal at the time. Then it hit $3,500 within weeks. By October, the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) had cleared $4,000 for the first time ever. Now we're sitting around $4,350, and the year isn't even over yet.

That's a 65% gain year-to-date, which happens to be gold's best showing since 1979. The kind of move that usually has people calling a top and warning about exhaustion. Except some of the smartest analysts on Wall Street are saying the opposite: this thing might only be halfway done.

Why JP Morgan Thinks $5,000 Is Next, and $6,000 Isn't Crazy

J.P. Morgan Global Research is projecting gold prices will push toward $5,000 an ounce next year. And they're not stopping there. The bank has laid out a longer-term scenario where $6,000 becomes entirely plausible.

This isn't momentum chasing. The bank's commodity strategists argue that the fundamental drivers behind gold's rebound are still playing out. Central banks keep adding to their reserves, investors are shifting more capital into non-yielding hedges, and mine supply isn't keeping pace with higher prices.

"While this rally in gold has not, and will not, be linear, we believe the trends driving this rebasing higher in gold prices are not exhausted," said Natasha Kaneva, head of global commodities strategy at J.P. Morgan.

Demand Is Running Hot, and Not Just From the Usual Suspects

Here's a number that stands out: in the third quarter of 2025 alone, JPMorgan estimates that investor and central bank gold demand reached roughly 980 tonnes. That's more than 50% higher than the average of the previous four quarters.

Looking into 2026, the bank expects demand to settle around 585 tonnes per quarter. That includes steady central bank buying, resilient bar and coin demand, and ETF inflows likely concentrated early in the year.

And even with gold trading near all-time highs, central banks haven't backed off. Demand stayed elevated through Q3 2025, suggesting that price alone isn't enough to slow accumulation. The bank also expects gold ETFs to keep attracting inflows as the Federal Reserve continues its easing cycle.

Then there's the buyer base itself, which is broadening. JPMorgan highlights new sources of demand emerging, from Chinese insurance companies to players coming out of the crypto ecosystem. That's a wider pool of participants than previous gold cycles attracted.

All of which gives the bank strong conviction that demand can carry gold to $5,000 an ounce in 2026. And they think that might actually be conservative.

"We have laid out a scenario where if diversification of just 0.5% of foreign U.S. asset holdings into gold took place, it would be enough new demand to drive prices to $6,000/oz," said Gregory Shearer, head of base and precious metals strategy at J.P. Morgan.

"With gold mine supply relatively inelastic and slow to respond to these higher prices and demand expected to remain robust, risk continues to skew toward reaching this multi-year target much quicker than expected," he added.

So yeah, gold's had a monster year. But if JP Morgan is right, the real fireworks might still be ahead.

JP Morgan Sees Gold Hitting $6,000 as Rally Shows No Signs of Exhaustion

MarketDash Editorial Team
3 hours ago
Gold has surged 65% in 2025 to around $4,350 per ounce, its best performance since 1979. JP Morgan expects the rally to continue toward $5,000 next year, with a potential path to $6,000 as central banks and investors pile into the precious metal.

Remember when gold broke $3,000 an ounce back in March? That felt like a big deal at the time. Then it hit $3,500 within weeks. By October, the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) had cleared $4,000 for the first time ever. Now we're sitting around $4,350, and the year isn't even over yet.

That's a 65% gain year-to-date, which happens to be gold's best showing since 1979. The kind of move that usually has people calling a top and warning about exhaustion. Except some of the smartest analysts on Wall Street are saying the opposite: this thing might only be halfway done.

Why JP Morgan Thinks $5,000 Is Next, and $6,000 Isn't Crazy

J.P. Morgan Global Research is projecting gold prices will push toward $5,000 an ounce next year. And they're not stopping there. The bank has laid out a longer-term scenario where $6,000 becomes entirely plausible.

This isn't momentum chasing. The bank's commodity strategists argue that the fundamental drivers behind gold's rebound are still playing out. Central banks keep adding to their reserves, investors are shifting more capital into non-yielding hedges, and mine supply isn't keeping pace with higher prices.

"While this rally in gold has not, and will not, be linear, we believe the trends driving this rebasing higher in gold prices are not exhausted," said Natasha Kaneva, head of global commodities strategy at J.P. Morgan.

Demand Is Running Hot, and Not Just From the Usual Suspects

Here's a number that stands out: in the third quarter of 2025 alone, JPMorgan estimates that investor and central bank gold demand reached roughly 980 tonnes. That's more than 50% higher than the average of the previous four quarters.

Looking into 2026, the bank expects demand to settle around 585 tonnes per quarter. That includes steady central bank buying, resilient bar and coin demand, and ETF inflows likely concentrated early in the year.

And even with gold trading near all-time highs, central banks haven't backed off. Demand stayed elevated through Q3 2025, suggesting that price alone isn't enough to slow accumulation. The bank also expects gold ETFs to keep attracting inflows as the Federal Reserve continues its easing cycle.

Then there's the buyer base itself, which is broadening. JPMorgan highlights new sources of demand emerging, from Chinese insurance companies to players coming out of the crypto ecosystem. That's a wider pool of participants than previous gold cycles attracted.

All of which gives the bank strong conviction that demand can carry gold to $5,000 an ounce in 2026. And they think that might actually be conservative.

"We have laid out a scenario where if diversification of just 0.5% of foreign U.S. asset holdings into gold took place, it would be enough new demand to drive prices to $6,000/oz," said Gregory Shearer, head of base and precious metals strategy at J.P. Morgan.

"With gold mine supply relatively inelastic and slow to respond to these higher prices and demand expected to remain robust, risk continues to skew toward reaching this multi-year target much quicker than expected," he added.

So yeah, gold's had a monster year. But if JP Morgan is right, the real fireworks might still be ahead.