After the Decline: Is Gold Now Presenting an Attractive Entry Opportunity?

Published: Mar 30, 2026 14:33
The gold price has undergone a sharp correction since its January high, unsettling many investors. The price decline of more than $1,000 per ounce appears at first glance to represent a break in the previous uptrend. However, according to analysts at WisdomTree, this movement reflects less a fundamental change in the macroeconomic situation than a combination of position adjustments, liquidity needs, and short-term market pressure.

Björn Junker    27. March 2026

The gold price has undergone a sharp correction since its January high, unsettling many investors. The price decline of more than $1,000 per ounce appears at first glance to represent a break in the previous uptrend. However, according to analysts at WisdomTree, this movement reflects less a fundamental change in the macroeconomic situation than a combination of position adjustments, liquidity needs, and short-term market pressure. This brings to the forefront the question of whether the recent pullback in gold should be interpreted as an expression of weaker fundamentals—or as a technical correction within a larger trend.

From WisdomTree’s perspective, the answer is clear. The firm interprets the decline in the gold price since the January high primarily as a reduction of the previous overextension. Traditional influencing factors such as bond yields, the U.S. dollar, and speculative positioning could, according to this assessment, explain only a smaller portion of the price decline. The significantly larger share is attributed to selling driven by broader market stress and the need for liquidity during volatile phases.

This interpretation is particularly relevant for the market. If the recent correction in gold was not primarily triggered by a weaker fundamental situation, then this also changes the perspective on the current price zone. WisdomTree argues that the underlying environment for gold has not fundamentally deteriorated thus far. This refocuses attention on geopolitical risks, monetary policy, and the broader commodity environment.

Gold Loses Altitude but Not Macroeconomic Relevance

The correction in gold was significant in magnitude, yet WisdomTree does not view it as a fundamental collapse. According to the model used there, only around $200 of the decline can be explained by classic influencing factors. These include, in particular, yields, dollar movements, and speculative market positioning. The fact that the actual decline far exceeds this suggests, from this perspective, that other factors have moved the market more strongly.

For gold, broader market pressure was apparently the decisive factor. During periods of heightened uncertainty and volatility, investors frequently sell even those positions that are still considered attractive long-term, simply to free up liquidity. WisdomTree recognizes precisely this pattern in the current situation as well. This means the decline in gold is not interpreted as a signal that the metal has lost its structural support, but rather as a reaction to a general moment of market stress, which may have created an attractive entry opportunity, according to WisdomTree.

In addition, there is a historical pattern that, according to WisdomTree, can be observed repeatedly. During major geopolitical events, gold often initially shows a period of weakness before the uptrend resumes. The recent movement would thus fit into a familiar market logic: positions are first reduced, then capital returns to the safe haven once the initial shock phase subsides and longer-term risks become more clearly visible.

WisdomTree Continues to See Gold in the Tension Between Inflation and Monetary Policy

Another central point in WisdomTree’s assessment concerns monetary policy. Part of the recent weakness in gold is related to changed interest rate expectations. However, here too the firm warns against what it views as an overly aggressive interpretation by the market. The assumption that central banks would respond strongly to higher inflation with significant rate hikes in the current environment is viewed there with skepticism.

The reason lies in the nature of the current inflationary pressure. If price increases stem primarily from supply-side shocks, a sharp monetary policy countermeasure would increase the risk of recession. For precisely this reason, WisdomTree expects central banks to remain in a kind of wait-and-see mode initially. For gold, such an environment would be fundamentally supportive, because high inflation without aggressively countervailing measures increases the real pressure on monetary values.

This view also aligns with the firm’s longer-term assessment. In its base scenario, WisdomTree assumes that gold could end the year at around $5,020 per ounce. At the same time, upside risks are emphasized that could drive the price significantly higher. In the context of new geopolitical risks, an increase to $6,000 is not even ruled out. This shows that the current correction is not understood there as the end of the movement, but as an interruption within a continuing constructive environment.

For WisdomTree, Gold Remains Part of a Larger Commodity Picture

Beyond gold, WisdomTree describes the current market environment as fundamentally favorable for commodities overall. The background is the assessment that the global economy is moving into a late-cycle phase in which inflation risks are rising and supply bottlenecks are carrying more weight. In such phases, commodities often develop more robustly than many other asset classes.

According to this logic, gold was the forerunner at the beginning of the movement. Now other areas of the commodity sector are catching up, including energy, agriculture, and base metals. Geopolitical disruptions and structurally insufficient investment in supply create, according to WisdomTree, the conditions for a longer phase of relative strength across the entire commodity complex.

The firm also incorporates this overall picture into its portfolio perspective. WisdomTree advocates holding between 15 and 20 percent in commodities within traditional portfolios alongside equities and bonds. Within this commodity allocation, around 20 percent should be allocated to precious metals, including gold. At the same time, it is recommended to focus on liquid markets and commodities with strong price momentum and tightening supply, rather than merely replicating broad indices.

This yields a clear picture: the recent correction has visibly put pressure on gold, yet WisdomTree views the supporting factors as still intact. For the market, therefore, the question remains less whether gold will remain supported long-term, but rather when short-term selling pressure will again be overshadowed by the larger macroeconomic and geopolitical drivers.

Source: https://goldinvest.de/en/after-the-decline-is-gold-now-presenting-an-attractive-entry-opportunity/

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After the Decline: Is Gold Now Presenting an Attractive Entry Opportunity? - Shanghai Metals Market (SMM)