Gold’s reputation as the market’s ultimate safe haven is facing one of its toughest tests in recent times.

Since the beginning of June, the yellow metal is down by over 4.3%, hitting an intraday low of $4,268.9 per ounce on Monday. The decline is the aftermath of a stronger-than-expected U.S. nonfarm payrolls report that reignited expectations for higher interest rates.

Overall, it is a dramatic round trip for bullion, erasing the entire year’s gain. When the metal reached near $5,600 an ounce in January, it was up nearly 30%.

What makes the selloff remarkable is the broader context. The United States and Iran remain locked in conflict, the Strait of Hormuz remains disrupted, and U.S. inflation is running at 3.8%—conditions that would traditionally trigger a rush into defensive assets.

Instead, gold is behaving less like portfolio insurance and more like a risk asset. Rather than responding to geopolitical fear, precious metals are increasingly trading on monetary policy expectations and the rising cost of carry.

Yet, the breakdown extends beyond commodities. Bitcoin (CRYPTO: BTC/USD) has also experienced significant outflows. ProShares Bitcoin ETF (NYSE:BITO) is down 32.7% year-to-date, suggesting investors are abandoning alternative hedges in favor of assets that provide immediate income.

Searching for Real Yield

The shift poses a deeper problem for investors. The traditional 60/40 stock/bond portfolio struggles when inflation and interest rates keep rising together.

Higher energy prices linked to the Middle East conflict have pushed inflation expectations higher, increasing pressure on the Federal Reserve to keep rates elevated. CME FedWatch data now indicates markets are pricing a 71% probability of at least one hike by December.

When Treasury yields and the U.S. dollar move sharply higher, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding assets like gold rises as well.

“We’ve got payrolls that came in fairly significantly over what was expected,”  Bart Melek, global head of commodity strategy at TD Securities, said on CNBC. “The implication for gold here is that the cost of carry is getting quite high.”

Naturally, defensive capital is migrating elsewhere. Inflationary risk is pushing Treasury Inflation-Protected Securities (TIPS) and short-duration Treasuries into focus. Both of them provide yield while shielding against inflation-driven policy tightening.

iShares TIPS Bond ETF (NYSE:TIP) yields 2.81%, while Vanguard Short-Term Bond Index Fund ETF Shares (NYSE:BSV) yields 3.97%.

The Floor Under the Rock

Yet while investors are selling bullion, the physical gold market tells a different story.

Gold prices may be down 23% from the January peak, but producer economics remain exceptionally strong. Since 2022, gold prices have more than doubled, while all-in sustaining costs have increased by only 30%.

By that account, operating margins are around 5 times higher than they were 3 years ago. That disconnect is the notable gap, fueling an already visible wave of mergers and acquisitions in the mining sector.

Meanwhile, central banks continue to provide a structural floor beneath the market.

Although jewelry demand in China and India has weakened due to higher prices, official-sector buying remains resilient. Emerging-market central banks have averaged 29 tons of net gold purchases per month over the past three years.

Poland and China led April buying, with China extending its accumulation streak to 18 consecutive months. These institutions ignore short-term noise and pursue efforts to diversify reserves away from the U.S. dollar and adapt to changing global trade patterns.

Gold’s traditional role as a short-term hedge may be fading. But as long as central banks continue accumulating bullion, its long-term strategic value remains firmly intact.

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