Gold ETFs experienced significant outflows in March as investors booked profits from the precious metal's recent rally, despite ongoing geopolitical tensions.

Last month, investors withdrew more than $12 billion from the world's two largest gold ETFs, the SPDR Gold Trust (NYSE:GLD) and iShares Gold Trust (NYSE:IAU), both of which lost $8.5 billion and $3.7 billion, respectively, as per data from Etf.com. The selling coincided with a more than 11% drop in gold prices during the month, suggesting a wave of profit-taking as prices retreated from recent highs.

ETFs Become Exit Route For Investors

The magnitude of the outflows from these funds indicates investors' preference for ETFs as tactical tools. Highly liquid funds like GLD and IAU allow institutional investors to quickly reduce exposure and lock in profits, particularly after periods of strong performance.

Physical demand for gold is often driven by medium- to long-term investment strategies. However, ETFs tend to be more volatile and suited to shorter-term positions. The sharp redemptions point to active portfolio rebalancing rather than a structural shift away from gold.

Price Drop Triggers Feedback Loop

Gold's decline appears to have both driven and reinforced the outflows. As prices began to fall, investors moved to secure gains, accelerating redemptions from ETFs and adding further pressure on the metal.

This feedback loop, in which a dip in gold prices contributes to gold ETF outflows, which in turn weigh on gold prices, has resulted in gold experiencing its worst monthly decline in 17 years.

Even though gold ETF outflows were mainly driven by profit-taking, there were some macro factors at play as well. For instance, a strengthening dollar and rising yields on Treasury securities reduced demand for gold as a non-yielding asset class. This gave gold investors another reason to sell gold and lock in their gains.

Shifting interest rate expectations amid persistent inflationary pressures have also added to the dampening of demand for the bullion.

What To Expect

The key question now is whether the outflows represent a temporary reset or the start of a more sustained pullback. If profit-taking subsides, flows could stabilize, particularly if geopolitical risks persist or central bank demand remains supportive.

For now, gold ETF data shows outflows as investors look to lock in gains on gold’s rally.

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