What Happens to Core CPI (ex Food/Energy) When Gold Hits $3,000?
What does gold at $3,000 mean for the global economy? Analysis of what drives gold to record highs and the implications for currencies, bonds, equities, and inflation.
How Core CPI (ex Food/Energy) Responds
Scenario Background
Gold at $3,000 per ounce represents a significant psychological level and, depending on when it is reached, potentially a structural regime change in global monetary dynamics. Gold's price is driven by four fundamental forces: real interest rates (inverse), dollar strength (inverse), central bank demand (positive), and fear/uncertainty (positive). For gold to reach $3,000, multiple drivers typically need to align simultaneously.
Read full scenario analysis →Historical Context
Gold's major price milestones tell the story of monetary regimes. It broke $100 in 1973 as Nixon abandoned the gold standard, $800 in 1980 during the inflation crisis (equivalent to ~$3,000 in 2025 dollars), $1,000 in 2008 during the financial crisis, $2,000 in 2020 during COVID monetary expansion, and $2,500+ in 2024 driven by central bank buying and geopolitical uncertainty. Each milestone was driven by a combination of loose monetary policy, fiscal concerns, and geopolitical instability. The ...
What to Watch For
- •Central bank gold purchases exceeding 1,000 tonnes annually, structural demand shift
- •Real yields falling toward zero or negative territory, removes the opportunity cost of gold
- •Dollar index breaking below key support with momentum, confirms the currency rotation
- •Gold mining stocks outperforming gold, signals the market sees sustained higher prices
- •Silver breaking out and compressing the gold/silver ratio, confirms a broad precious metals bull market
Other Assets When Gold Hits $3,000
Other Scenarios Affecting Core CPI (ex Food/Energy)
Get scenario analysis and Core CPI (ex Food/Energy) alerts delivered to your inbox.