Gold Futures Market Briefing — 2026-04-24 업데이트
As of April 24, 2026, the gold futures market remains structurally bullish despite short-term volatility. Key factors influencing prices include Morgan Stanley's lowered price target, sustained central bank buying, and uncertainty surrounding the U.S.-Iran truce deadline. Technically, the reaction near the $4,645 support level is critical for determining the short-term trend.
Gold Futures Market Briefing — 2026-04-24
Gold Price Status and Key Figures
As of April 24, 2026, the spot gold (XAU/USD) price is $4,694.23, a slight decrease of $3.83 (-0.08%) from the previous day. While down -2.88% on a weekly basis, it remains up +3.65% for the month and +8.67% year-to-date (YTD). Compared to the same period last year, the price has surged by +41.40%.
According to analysis from LiteFinance, the spot gold price was recorded at $4,713.83 on April 23, 2026. Their technical outlook suggests a bullish trend, though they recommend waiting for the current downward correction to finish before entering buy positions.

Market Drivers and News Analysis
1. Morgan Stanley Lowers Gold Price Target
Morgan Stanley has cut its gold price target for the second half of 2026 from $5,700 to $5,200, a reduction of approximately 9%. The bank noted that gold prices have already fallen about 8% over the past six weeks, suggesting this may represent a structural shift rather than a simple technical correction.

However, The Economic Times, citing multiple analytical firms including goldsilver.com, reported that major banks like JP Morgan, Goldman Sachs, Wells Fargo, and UBS continue to emphasize buying opportunities at current levels.
2. Sustained Central Bank Buying — Emerging Market Demand
A study by Visual Capitalist on 2026 central bank gold purchases shows that central banks in emerging markets are increasing gold holdings amidst geopolitical uncertainty. This marks the 16th consecutive year of net buying, reinforcing gold’s role as a strategic asset.

Analysis by IndexBox highlights notable transactions by the Banque de France and shifts in holdings by China and Türkiye as key issues currently affecting the gold market. Some analysts are pointing to the possibility of gold emerging as an alternative asset to the U.S. dollar.
3. U.S.-Iran Truce Deadline and Fed Uncertainty — Persistent Geopolitical Risk
According to a Capital.com report from April 22, the looming deadline for U.S.-Iran truce negotiations and uncertainty regarding Federal Reserve (Fed) monetary policy are identified as the main drivers of short-term gold volatility. While geopolitical tensions support demand for safe-haven assets, uncertainty over the Fed’s interest rate path is affecting gold prices through dollar fluctuations.

In an April 24 report from The Times of India, VP Research analyst Jateen Trivedi stated: "Gold prices will continue to see volatility, and as of today (April 24), we recommend a 'buy on dips' strategy."
Technical Chart Analysis and Trading Scenarios
According to the latest technical analysis from LiteFinance (as of 2026-04-24), the key levels are:
- Key Support: $4,645.91
- Key Resistance Levels: $4,701.55 / $4,760.74 / $4,821.84 / $4,881.57 / $4,937.88 / $4,996.26 and above
An intraday analysis by FX.co on April 22 warned that the two major EMAs have formed a "Death Cross," which could put downward pressure on gold toward recent support levels in the short term. A major secondary resistance level was identified at $4,904.68.
Discovery Alert is currently applying a Fibonacci retracement support/resistance framework based on the decline from gold's all-time high of $5,586.
Short-term Trading Scenario Summary:
- Whether the price breaks below support ($4,645–$4,646) is the key variable for future direction.
- Breaking through resistance at $4,701–$4,761 could lead to a re-test of the $4,820–$4,880 range.
- If the EMA Death Cross persists, short-term downward pressure remains valid.
Macro Context
1. Dollar and Interest Rate Uncertainty — A Crossroads for Fed Policy
Capital.com’s report points out that uncertainty regarding the U.S. Federal Reserve’s interest rate policy remains the core macroeconomic variable for the gold market. While gold is showing short-term volatility as the direction of the Dollar Index remains undecided, the long-term inverse correlation with real interest rates supports a bullish bias.
2. Morgan Stanley’s Structural Warning — A Sign of a Bull Market Pivot?
According to The Economic Times, Morgan Stanley’s decision to lower its gold target reflects a diagnosis that there may be potential for deeper structural changes beyond a simple technical correction. The speed of the 8% decline over six weeks is unusual and may reflect a decline in safe-haven demand as global "risk-on" sentiment recovers.
3. 16 Years of Consecutive Net Buying — The Anchor for Structural Demand
According to a recent report by Investing News (published 14 hours ago as of April 24), central banks are elevating gold as a actively managed strategic asset to hedge against geopolitical tensions. This structural demand remains the primary driver maintaining the foundation for gold's long-term bull market despite short-term price adjustments.

Investment Disclaimer: This briefing is for informational purposes only and should not be construed as investment advice or a recommendation. The gold futures market involves high volatility and the risk of principal loss.
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