Gold Investment Projected to Surpass Jewelry as Main Demand Driver for First Time
LONDON — Physical gold
investment is on track to overtake jewelry as the primary driver of global
demand this year for the first time on record, according to an annual report
released Thursday by Metals Focus, a London-based precious metals consultancy widely
cited by industry analysts and financial media.
The shift follows a
19% decline in jewelry demand last year as consumers contended with record-high
prices and geopolitical uncertainty. According to Reuters, research consultancy
Metals Focus expects double-digit losses for the jewelry sector to continue
throughout 2026.
Gold reached an
all-time high of $5,595 per troy ounce in January. While prices have since
retreated 20% from that peak, Metals Focus anticipates a second-half rally,
forecasting an average price of $4,920 per ounce for the full year — a 43%
increase over 2025.
Retail investors are
increasingly turning from ornamentation toward bars and coins. Physical
investment is expected to rise 15% this year to its highest level since 2013,
with China leading the growth. Central bank demand, meanwhile, is projected to
fall as some nations sell gold reserves to stabilize local currencies amid
rising energy costs and inflationary pressures.
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