Commodities February 27, 2026

Bernstein sharply raises long-term gold forecast, citing institutional demand and rate-cut expectations

Firm projects $4,800/oz in 2026 and $6,100/oz by 2030 as central bank buying and ETF flows underpin the outlook

By Jordan Park
Bernstein sharply raises long-term gold forecast, citing institutional demand and rate-cut expectations

Investment research firm Bernstein has increased its long-term projections for gold, pointing to persistent institutional appetite from central banks and exchange-traded funds, together with an anticipated shift in U.S. monetary policy, as key drivers. The firm now models gold at $4,800 per ounce in 2026 and $6,100 by 2030 and has adjusted its views on major miners accordingly.

Key Points

  • Bernstein now projects gold at $4,800/oz in 2026 and $6,100/oz by 2030, driven by institutional demand and macro expectations.
  • Central bank accumulation and ETF inflows are the primary demand pillars cited; survey data show 95% of central banks expect reserve increases and 73% expect a reduced U.S. dollar share over five years.
  • The outlook affects commodity producers and related financial products - notably gold miners such as Newmont Goldcorp (upgraded to Outperform) and gold ETFs - and is sensitive to U.S. rate-path expectations.

Overview

Bernstein has revised up its long-term price expectations for gold, arguing that sustained flows from large institutional holders and a more favorable macro backdrop could lift the metal substantially by the end of the decade. The firm now forecasts gold at $4,800 per ounce in 2026 and $6,100 per ounce by 2030.

Demand framework

The research update introduces an analytical emphasis on net institutional demand - specifically the combined roles of central bank purchases and ETF flows - and on how prospective U.S. interest-rate moves may affect the metal.

“Recently, gold demand has been primarily driven by central bank purchase and ETF flows,” Bernstein analyst Bob Brackett said in a note.

Central bank acquisitions, while expected to ease in 2025 relative to recent peaks, remain at levels well above those seen before 2022. Survey results cited by Bernstein indicate that 95% of central banks expect their global gold reserves to rise over the coming year, and 73% anticipate lowering the share of U.S. dollar holdings in their reserves over a five-year horizon. These survey signals are factored into the firm’s assumptions about ongoing reserve diversification.

ETF flows as a swing factor

Bernstein characterizes ETF flows as the swing element of institutional demand. The note highlights that ETF holdings have climbed strongly since mid-2024, and that such funds can play a pro-cyclical role - amplifying price moves when inflows accelerate.

Macro outlook and rate cuts

The firm also points to the macroeconomic backdrop. Market pricing implies two to three Federal Reserve rate cuts in 2026, a development Bernstein says would be supportive of gold prices. The note references a historical observation that bullion has risen an average of 6.53% over the 12 months following rate cuts.

“We can apply this estimate to the number of potential rate cuts. With the market currently pricing in at least two cuts in 2026, this implies a potential total return of around 13%,” Brackett wrote.

Structural drivers and company implications

Looking past near-term dynamics, Bernstein points to structural factors such as reserve diversification efforts and an expanding U.S. fiscal deficit as additional support for the bullish case on gold.

The research note also led Bernstein to upgrade Newmont Goldcorp to Outperform, assigning a $157 price target. The firm cited a 26% lift in its EBITDA forecast for the company, now projected at $21.9 billion, as a direct consequence of its more bullish gold outlook.

Risks

Bernstein flags downside scenarios that could undermine the forecast, including a slowdown in central bank purchases and the possibility of higher real interest rates. Both developments could weigh on ETF flows and press gold prices lower.


Reporter’s note: This article summarizes the contents of Bernstein’s latest research update without introducing additional data beyond what the firm presented.

Risks

  • A deceleration in central bank buying could reduce a key source of institutional demand - impacting gold prices and mining-sector earnings.
  • Higher real interest rates would likely pressure ETF inflows and the broader gold market, potentially reversing the bullish momentum.

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