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Gold at $2,400: The Bull Case, the Bear Case, and What History Tells Us

With gold trading near all-time highs, investors face a genuinely difficult question: is the metal in the early stages of a structural bull market driven by de-dollarisation and geopolitical fragmentation, or approaching a cyclical peak driven by speculative excess?

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By Sarah Mitchell
AurexHQ · 26 May 2026
2 min read· 383 words
Gold at $2,400: The Bull Case, the Bear Case, and What History Tells Us
AurexHQ Editorial · Gold

Gold has always attracted extreme views. Its advocates see it as the only honest money, the ultimate store of value, the asset that will preserve wealth when every other system fails. Its critics dismiss it as a barbarous relic that pays no interest, produces no cash flows, and has value only because enough people believe it does.

Both views contain elements of truth, which is what makes gold such a genuinely interesting analytical challenge at current price levels. At over $2,400 per troy ounce — up from $1,800 just two years ago — the metal is priced for something significantly more bullish than simple inflation protection. Understanding what that something is, and whether it is real or speculative, is essential for anyone with precious metals exposure.

The Structural Bull Case

The most compelling argument for gold at current levels centres on what analysts call de-dollarisation — the gradual erosion of the US dollar's dominance as the world's primary reserve currency.

The freezing of approximately $300 billion of Russian central bank reserves held in Western financial institutions following the 2022 Ukraine invasion sent a clear signal to central banks in China, India, Saudi Arabia, and across the developing world: assets held within the Western financial system are subject to political risk that traditional analysis does not capture.

Gold, held physically, is subject to no such risk. It cannot be frozen, sanctioned, or confiscated by remote decree. For nations seeking to maintain reserve assets genuinely outside Western financial system control, physical gold is the obvious solution — and they have been buying it at record rates.

The Technical Picture

From a technical analysis perspective, gold's break above the $2,100 resistance level that had capped the metal since 2020 was a significant development. The breakout occurred on above-average volume and has been confirmed by sustained trading above the level on multiple retest attempts.

Technical analysts identify two key zones above current prices: the $2,450 all-time high set in May 2024, and the more speculative target zone of $2,600-2,800 that several prominent analysts have put forward for a sustained bull case scenario.

The bear case centres primarily on interest rates: if the Federal Reserve is forced to maintain higher interest rates for longer than the market currently expects, the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold increases, potentially triggering significant position reduction by leveraged speculators.

Topics:goldprecious metalsbull marketinvestingde-dollarisation
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Sarah Mitchell
AurexHQ Correspondent · Gold

Sarah Mitchell at AurexHQ delivers expert analysis and breaking coverage across global markets, trade intelligence, and business strategy — combining deep industry expertise with rigorous reporting standards to provide actionable intelligence for business leaders worldwide.

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