The $8,000 price target is conceptual rather than a formal forecast, but the structural argument underpinning it is difficult to dismiss. Central bank buying has been the dominant driver of gold demand since 2008, and the broadening of that buying beyond the major accumulators to include Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE and Egypt suggests the trend has further to run.
The near-term picture is more complicated. Gold has suffered its worst two-month decline on record, losing almost 12% over that period as the US-Iran conflict, paradoxically, weighed on prices rather than supported them. The metal remains up 7% year-to-date and 39.5% over the past 12 months, but the failure to sustain a safe-haven bid during active conflict has raised questions about the durability of the rally at current levels.
The longer-term bull case rests on the pace and scale of emerging market reserve reallocation. At just 16% of emerging market central bank reserves currently, gold has significant headroom if those institutions move toward a 40% target allocation.
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Via a Deutsche Bank note earlier this week, ICYMI.
Summary:
- Deutsche Bank has published a scenario analysis projecting gold prices could reach $8,000 an ounce within five years, implying roughly 80% upside from current levels, based on central bank gold reserves rising to 40% of total holdings from approximately 30% currently
- The projection is described as conceptual in nature and not an official price forecast, but is grounded in the bank’s assessment of structural de-dollarisation trends among emerging market central banks
- Emerging market central banks currently hold only 16% of their reserves in gold, despite having accounted for all net central bank gold purchases since 2008, suggesting significant capacity for further accumulation
- Central banks globally have added over 225 million ounces to their gold reserves since the 2008 financial crisis, while the US dollar’s share of global reserves has fallen from over 60% in the early 2000s to around 40% today
- Buying is broadening beyond the major accumulators of China, Russia, India and Turkey to include Kazakhstan, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Egypt and the United Arab Emirates
- Deutsche Bank frames the structural shift as the end of the post-Cold War “end of history” era, noting that the world has returned to superpower competition, the US is retreating from free trade and alliances, and the dollar banking system has been weaponised through sanctions
- Gold is seen as particularly attractive to emerging market central banks seeking dollar diversification because it is liquid, widely accepted and carries no sovereign risk as it is not issued by any government
- Emerging market and developing economy reserves currently stand at approximately $7.5 trillion to $8 trillion, per IMF data; Deutsche Bank’s scenario assumes those reserves could fall to $5 trillion while gold’s share still rises to 40%
- Gold has fallen nearly 12% over the past two months in its worst two-month decline on record, losing two-thirds of its year-to-date gains after rallying to a record high in January; it remains up 7% year-to-date and 39.5% over the past 12 months
- Front-month gold futures settled at $4,614.70, with the metal’s underperformance during the US-Iran conflict having disappointed investors who anticipated a stronger safe-haven bid
Gold’s near-term performance has frustrated bulls, but Deutsche Bank has laid out a structural case for prices approaching $8,000 an ounce within five years, anchored in one of the most significant shifts in global reserve management in a generation.
The German bank’s scenario analysis centres on the pace of de-dollarisation among emerging market central banks. Those institutions currently hold just 16% of their reserves in gold, a remarkably low figure given that they have accounted for all net central bank gold purchases since the 2008 financial crisis. Global central banks have added over 225 million ounces to their holdings in that period, while the dollar’s share of global reserves has declined from over 60% in the early 2000s to around 40% today. If emerging market central banks were to push their gold allocation to 40% of reserves, Deutsche Bank’s simulation points to a gold price of $8,000 an ounce, even on the assumption that total emerging market reserves contract from their current level of $7.5 trillion to $8 trillion down to $5 trillion.
The bank is careful to frame this as a conceptual scenario rather than a formal price forecast, but the structural logic is consistent with where the gold market’s centre of gravity has been shifting for years. What has changed is the breadth of the buying. It is no longer confined to China, Russia, India and Turkey. Saudi Arabia, Qatar, the UAE, Kazakhstan and Egypt are all now active accumulators, suggesting the trend is becoming a systemic feature of emerging market reserve policy rather than an idiosyncratic decision by a handful of large economies.
Deutsche Bank’s explanation for why this is happening draws on a broad geopolitical thesis. The post-Cold War era, built on US-led multilateralism, free trade and dollar dominance, is unwinding. The US is retreating from its traditional role as guarantor of global security and open commerce, and the weaponisation of the dollar banking system through sanctions has given emerging market central banks a concrete operational reason to diversify away from dollar assets. Gold is the natural beneficiary of that shift: it is liquid, universally accepted and carries no sovereign risk, as it is not the liability of any government or central bank.
The near-term picture complicates the narrative. Gold has posted its worst two-month decline on record, falling nearly 12% and surrendering two-thirds of its year-to-date gains after reaching a record high in January. The US-Iran conflict, which might have been expected to drive a sharp safe-haven bid, has instead weighed on prices, disappointing investors who had positioned for that outcome. The metal nonetheless remains up 7% year-to-date and 39.5% over the past 12 months, and the long-term structural case, driven by sustained central bank accumulation, remains intact according to Deutsche Bank’s analysis.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.
