ING sees gold near $5,000/oz by year‑end despite current weakness

ING sees gold near $5,000/oz by year‑end despite current weakness
Sayantan Sarkar
11 May 2026, 16:32 PM

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COMEX Gold (GC) long

Buy COMEX June gold futures (GC) or a gold ETF like GLD. The article says the sell-off is macro-driven (higher oil, higher real yields, stronger USD), but ING still targets $5,000/oz by year-end. The catalyst stack is central-bank buying (China +8.1t, Poland +31t) plus ETF flows flipping positive ($6.6B inflows in April) and managed-money still net long on COMEX. When Fed-cut expectations improve, flows and price should re-align quickly.

Key Risk: Peace talks collapse and energy stays elevated, keeping real yields and the dollar high so gold can’t catch up.

USD strength unwind (UUP short)

Sell the US Dollar ETF (UUP) or short USD via a USD index exposure. ING explicitly flags the dollar and real yields as the key constraints on gold. If payroll strength fades or inflation cools enough to pull forward Fed easing, the dollar should weaken, directly removing the main headwind for gold and lifting risk assets too.

Key Risk: US data stays hot and the Fed stays higher-for-longer, keeping the dollar bid and crushing the gold/FX unwind.

  • Gold down 12% since Iran war, pressured by yields and strong dollar.
  • ING’s Manthey said energy shock keeps Fed on hold, weighs on bullion.
  • Central bank buying, ETF inflows support outlook for $5,000/oz target.

Gold has fallen about 12% since the Iran conflict began, defying its traditional safe‑haven role. 

ING strategist Ewa Manthey says the sell‑off reflects macro headwinds from higher oil prices, stronger yields, and a firmer dollar, but forecasts prices could still rise to $5,000 per ounce by year‑end.

Source: ING Research

Gold’s counterintuitive decline

Gold is typically seen as a hedge in times of crisis, yet since the outbreak of the Iran war, it has dropped sharply.

According to ING Economics, the metal has lost around 12% since late February, a move Manthey describes as “counterintuitive but explainable.”

“Gold’s safe‑haven appeal tends to perform best in a financial crisis or growth shock – when real yields fall, and the dollar weakens,” Manthey noted. 

A supply‑driven energy shock does the opposite. Higher oil prices push inflation up, keep central banks on hold and strengthen the dollar, all of which weigh on gold.

Ewa MantheyCommodities strategist

Macro headwinds

The Federal Reserve’s decision to leave rates unchanged in April added to the pressure.

Inflation has re‑accelerated since the war began, reducing the case for near‑term easing. 

Manthey explained: “Real yields and the dollar remain the key constraints on gold. A prolonged energy shock could push back the timeline for Fed cuts.”

Friday’s US payrolls data showed continued labor market strength, with unemployment steady at 4.3%.

That gave the Fed little reason to rush into rate cuts, reinforcing the higher‑for‑longer narrative that has weighed on bullion.

Peace talks and geopolitical risk

Gold briefly rallied last week but gave back gains after US President Donald Trump rejected Iran’s latest peace proposal as “totally unacceptable.” 

Manthey said: “The setback keeps the ceasefire timeline uncertain and inflation risks elevated – reinforcing the higher‑for‑longer rate narrative that has weighed on gold throughout the conflict.”

She added that a durable resolution remains the key catalyst for a sustained recovery.

Until then, gold is likely to remain caught between geopolitical uncertainty and monetary headwinds.

Central bank demand

Despite short‑term weakness, central banks continue to provide structural support.

China’s central bank added 8.1 tonnes in April, extending its buying streak to 15 consecutive months. 

Poland also increased reserves by 31 tonnes in Q1, while Turkey was the largest seller, cutting holdings by 60 tonnes to support foreign exchange liquidity.

Manthey emphasised: “Reserve diversification remains supportive for gold over the medium term, even as some central banks sell to shore up liquidity.”

ETF flows turning positive

Investor positioning is also shifting.

Global gold ETFs recorded $6.6 billion of inflows in April, reversing March outflows.

Europe led the move, reflecting concerns about exposure to a Strait of Hormuz closure. 

Contributions from Asia and the US were around a third of Europe’s over the month, according to data from the World Gold Council.

Manthey said: “ETF flows track Fed expectations closely – Fed easing should be a catalyst for renewed inflows in the second half.”

The sustained net long positions of managed money on COMEX suggest a positive outlook among investors, although the positioning is not yet considered excessive or "crowded."

Source: ING Research

Outlook: constructive despite risks

ING remains constructive on gold, projecting prices could climb to $5,000 per ounce by year‑end. 

Manthey cautioned, however, that risks remain: “The main downside risk is a breakdown in peace talks that keeps energy prices elevated and the Fed on hold into year‑end.”

Gold’s safe‑haven role is not in question. But recent months have shown that short‑term price action can still be dominated by macro forces – particularly real yields, the dollar and expectations for Fed policy. Once those headwinds begin to ease, gold’s underlying support should reassert itself.

Ewa MantheyCommodities strategist at ING

At the time of writing, the most-active June gold contract on the COMEX was at $4,729 per ounce, largely unchanged from the previous close.