Gold and silver market update — May 1, 2026
Key Takeaways
- Asian investors drove bar and coin demand to 474 tonnes in Q1 2026 — up 42% year-over-year and the second-highest quarter on record — while US gold ETF holders recorded net outflows in March.
- Central banks bought 244 tonnes of gold net in Q1 2026 (World Gold Council), extending seventeen consecutive months of net purchases even as prices sat 81% above year-ago levels.
- Western investors sold paper gold in Q1 2026 while Asian buyers absorbed physical metal at record prices. That kind of divergence has historically marked structural turning points in gold markets.
Global physical gold demand hit 474 tonnes in Q1 2026 — the second-highest quarter on record — at prices near all-time highs. The WGC Q1 2026 gold demand report — Gold Demand Trends, published April 29 — shows the split clearly: Asian retail investors surged while US ETFs bled outflows in March, erasing earlier inflows.
The buyers behind that near-record physical demand were not chasing momentum. They were making a deliberate decision — hold an asset outside the financial system at a moment when inflation is 4.5% and the Fed cannot cut rates. Gold is trading near $4,600 an ounce as of May 1, 2026 (JM Bullion) — down roughly $775 from January’s intraday high of $5,405.
Who Was Buying Gold in Q1 2026 — and Who Wasn’t?
Asian investors — across China, India, and Southeast Asia — drove bar and coin demand to 474 tonnes, up 42% year-over-year. Notably, bar demand alone reached 397.7 tonnes (WGC, April 29, 2026). That is the highest single quarterly bar total since the Council began tracking the series.
However, US-listed gold ETFs told the opposite story. March outflows were large enough to erase every inflow from January and February. Western institutional investors were watching real yields hold above 1.9%. They calculated the opportunity cost of a non-yielding asset and trimmed. Same gold price, opposite decision.
Physical Buyers vs. Paper Sellers: The Q1 2026 Gold Demand Split
Global bar & coin demand (tonnes) vs. US gold ETF net flows (tonnes) — Q1 2024 to Q1 2026
Source: World Gold Council Q1 2026 Gold Demand Trends (gold.org, April 29, 2026) | GoldSilver
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Why Are Eastern and Western Investors Reading Gold So Differently?
Western ETF investors are running a real-yield model. The question is: what does gold return versus a Treasury bond? With the 10-year real yield at 1.96% (Federal Reserve Economic Data, April 29, 2026), bonds pay you something and gold does not. That is a legitimate short-term headwind.
Asian retail buyers are asking a different question entirely: what will this ounce buy me in ten years? The Personal Consumption Expenditures (PCE) index printed at 4.5% annualized in Q1 2026. Core PCE came in at 4.3% (Bureau of Economic Analysis, April 30, 2026). The Fed held rates at 3.50–3.75% — with four hawkish dissents — and signalled no room to cut. Against that backdrop, the purchasing-power question has a compelling answer. The real-yield model looks at the next quarter. The purchasing-power model looks at the next decade.
What Are Major Institutions Forecasting for Gold in 2026?
Central banks bought 244 tonnes of gold net in Q1, up 3% year-over-year (WGC). That extends seventeen consecutive months of net purchases — through some of the highest prices in history. These are the institutions that issue fiat currency for a living. They are not buying for a quarterly trade.
Goldman Sachs maintained its year-end 2026 gold target at $5,400 per ounce in a note published April 29, 2026, while flagging near-term downside risks. The bank’s demand nowcast picked up just 2 tonnes of central bank purchases in February — a pause during January’s price volatility. Goldman is still modelling 60 tonnes per month for the full year.
What Does the Demand Divergence Actually Signal?
Gold corrected from $5,405 to around $4,600. The mainstream story was the pullback, of course. The more important story: physical buyers absorbed that correction in near-record volume without structural demand flinching. The WGC Q1 2026 gold demand report puts total Q1 demand value at $193 billion — a 74% jump on only 2% more volume. On the supply side, mine output grew just 2%, to 1,231 tonnes. Gold mines cannot flood the market in two quarters because the price doubled. The supply-demand imbalance remains intact.
Western investors trimming paper gold in March were not wrong about real yields. They were working on a shorter horizon. The 474 tonnes that left vaults in Q1 2026 did not move on a trading signal. Those buyers are not watching the quarterly opportunity-cost calculation — because they do not plan to be forced out when it shifts.
What Should Gold Investors Watch in May 2026?
Three dates matter. The WGC’s monthly ETF Flows update lands around May 12–14 — it will confirm whether March’s US outflows reversed as gold rebounded. Goldman’s central bank nowcast for March and April arrives in the same window. A return toward 60 tonnes per month removes the one soft signal in an otherwise strong Q1 report.
The April Non-Farm Payrolls (NFP) report drops May 8. A weak number reopens the rate-cut debate. Real-yield compression would then start to close the gap between what the Western model says about gold and what the Asian model already knows.
SOURCES
1. World Gold Council — Gold Demand Trends Q1 2026
2. Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED) — 10-Year Real Yield DFII10
3. Bureau of Economic Analysis — GDP Advance Estimate, 1st Quarter 2026
4. Benzinga — Goldman Turns Tactically Cautious On Gold As Buyers Pause
5. TradingEconomics — Gold Price
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Always consult a qualified financial adviser before making investment decisions.
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