Gold market positioning has fractured between short-term futures traders and longer-term holders, with speculative players cutting exposure even as exchange-traded funds (ETFs) and physical buyers continue to accumulate, according to DBS Group Research strategist Eugene Leow.
Data for the week ending April 7 shows managed money net-long positions in gold dropping to a two-year low. That decline came even as both gross long and gross short positions rose, pointing to a two-way market and elevated uncertainty over gold’s near-term direction.
Short-term traders ramp up shorts as yields rise
Leow said hedge funds have been expanding short positions amid persistent inflation pressures and elevated real yields, which are keeping expectations for monetary policy tight.
Higher real yields have eroded gold’s traditional role as a near-term hedge and made yield-bearing assets relatively more attractive, discouraging shorter-term buying in the futures market.
This morning’s US inflation report added to that pressure. The Bureau of Labor Statistics said the March headline Consumer Price Index rose at a 3.1% annual rate, slightly above consensus forecasts. In the immediate aftermath, the yield on 10-year Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities climbed to about 1.95%, moving closer to the 2% level Leow flagged as a potential drag on gold demand.
Longer-term buyers keep accumulating
In contrast, strategic buyers have been using recent price weakness to build positions. Leow highlighted that ETF and physical demand remains resilient despite the more cautious stance in futures.
Preliminary figures from the World Gold Council show global gold-backed ETFs recorded net inflows of about 12 metric tons over the past week. Although that represents a slowdown from the prior period, it still signals ongoing accumulation by longer-horizon participants.
This divergence between paper and physical markets has deepened, creating what Leow described as a “coiled spring” backdrop, where positioning is stretched on both sides and the next major move could be abrupt.
Key triggers: inflation, Fed stance, and real yields
Leow sees upcoming macro data and policy signals as critical catalysts for resolving the current stalemate.
If inflation readings begin to cool or the Federal Reserve adopts a more dovish tone, short-covering by speculative accounts could combine with continued ETF inflows to fuel a sharp upside move in gold.
Conversely, if real yields push decisively back toward or above 2%, Leow warned that ETF demand is likely to stall, while futures traders could step up selling, reinforcing downside pressure on prices.
Market locked between two views
For now, positioning appears evenly balanced between traders looking for near-term downside on the back of higher real yields and those steadily building exposure with a longer time horizon and a view beyond the current inflation cycle.
Upcoming non-farm payrolls data and the Fed’s next round of guidance are expected to be closely watched, as any meaningful surprise could quickly break the deadlock and punish those caught on the wrong side of the next momentum shift.
Curious how macro trends shape assets like gold and Bitcoin? Discover more in our guide: how to invest in gold.
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