Gold and silver market update — May 5, 2026
In today’s update: What’s really driving gold prices? UK gilts at an 18-year high, Warsh scrapping forward guidance, and AI data centres buying gold at any price — five signals that explain why the floor is holding.
Why Did UK Gilt Yields Hit an 18-Year High Today?
UK 10-year gilt yields rose to 5.10% on May 5, 2026 — the highest since July 2008 (Trading Economics). Notably, markets are pricing in nearly three Bank of England rate hikes this year. The driver: Hormuz-driven energy inflation has pushed UK CPI to 3.3% year-on-year, with Brent crude above $112 a barrel.
But the number isn’t the real story. At its April 30 meeting, the BoE replaced its single inflation forecast with three scenarios: a short-lived shock (A), persistent energy prices (B), and a severe prolonged shock (C). Governor Bailey called it “a difficult judgement call.”
That phrase matters. It’s not confidence — it’s admission. A central bank that can’t forecast its own inflation path issues promises it can’t keep. Physical gold, however, depends on no such promise. That’s precisely why it belongs in a portfolio right now.
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What Did Trump’s “Project Freedom” Tell Us About Gold?
On Sunday, May 3, Trump announced “Project Freedom” — a US Navy operation to escort neutral vessels through the Strait of Hormuz, blockaded for ten weeks. By Monday, Iran had fired on US escort ships. The UAE intercepted cruise missiles near Fujairah. A fire broke out at the Fujairah oil facility.
Gold fell approximately 2% on Monday to around $4,540. By Tuesday it had recovered above $4,550.
Indeed, the recovery is the lesson. Ten weeks in, markets have fully absorbed the Hormuz risk premium. Gold doesn’t spike on individual escalations anymore — ultimately, that risk lives in the floor. What would actually lift gold from here is resolution: a sustained Hormuz reopening that cools oil, restores disinflation, and creates room for rate cuts. Every escalation that doesn’t resolve confirms the floor holds.
What Is Kevin Warsh Planning to Change at the Fed?
Kevin Warsh cleared the Senate Banking Committee 13–11 on April 29, 2026 — the first fully partisan Fed chair confirmation vote in committee history. A full Senate vote is expected the week of May 11, ahead of Powell’s May 15 term expiry.
The policy shift, however, is what matters. In written Senate responses (April 22), Warsh stated he does “not generally believe the Federal Reserve should offer forward guidance as currently practiced.” At his April 21 hearing, he said the Fed “holds on to those forecasts longer than they should.” He declined to commit to post-meeting press conferences. He calls his vision a “back-seat Fed.”
For gold investors, this is structural. Forward guidance is how gold prices short-term rate expectations. Remove it and uncertainty becomes the baseline. Physical gold — which needs no press conference to hold its value — becomes the natural anchor.
Why Are AI Data Centres Good News for Gold?
The World Gold Council’s Gold Demand Trends Q1 2026 report (April 29, 2026) confirmed gold technology demand hit 82 tonnes in Q1 — up 1% year-on-year. The WGC attributed that growth specifically to AI infrastructure, describing it as “largely” driven by data centre expansion.
Why it matters: AI servers require gold in power modules, printed circuit boards, and high-speed optical components. Silver and copper can’t match its reliability here. And critically, gold is a rounding error in the cost of a server. Alphabet, Amazon, Microsoft, and Meta plan to spend a combined $725 billion on infrastructure in 2026 — up 77% from last year (Financial Times, April 2026). At that scale, gold’s spot price is irrelevant to procurement.
This gives gold a structural demand floor that doesn’t switch off when rates are high or sentiment turns. That’s a genuinely new dynamic in the gold market.
What Did the Bank of England’s April 30 Vote Really Signal?
The Bank of England held Bank Rate at 3.75% on April 30, 2026, in an 8–1 vote. Chief Economist Huw Pill dissented, voting to hike to 4% immediately. But read the individual statements — the committee is far more divided than the vote count suggests.
From the official April 2026 MPC minutes: Megan Greene said she would “expect to increase Bank Rate… to lean against inflation rising into 2027.” Catherine Mann stated the same condition. Clare Lombardelli said she would “stand ready to react, forcefully if necessary” if Scenario C materialises. Dave Ramsden described his approach as “outlook and state-dependent.”
The BoE completed its sixth consecutive rate cut in December 2025. Five months later, one member is voting to hike and three more are conditionally prepared to follow. That’s not drift — that’s reversal.
What Do These Five Stories Have in Common?
They describe a single condition: monetary institutions are losing their grip on the inflation narrative — across multiple currencies, simultaneously.
What This Really Means?
Indeed, the BoE abandoned its own forecast. The incoming Fed chair wants to stop explaining his thinking in advance. UK gilts are pricing the highest rate expectations since the financial crisis. And a ten-week naval conflict in the world’s busiest oil strait has become background noise for gold.
In that context, gold’s 34% year-on-year gain isn’t a bubble. It’s the market’s rational response to fiat policy becoming less predictable, less credible, and less trustworthy — all at once.
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SOURCES
1. Trading Economics — UK 10-Year Gilt Yield · Brent Crude Oil Price · Gold Spot Price
2. Bank of England — April 2026 Monetary Policy Report · Governor Bailey Opening Remarks, April 30 · MPC Minutes, April 29, 2026
3. Office for National Statistics — Consumer Price Inflation, March 2026
4. US Central Command — Statement on Operation Project Freedom, May 3, 2026
5. US Senate Banking Committee — Warsh Hearing Transcript, April 21 · Written QFRs, April 22 · Committee Vote Record, April 29
6. Federal Reserve — Jerome Powell Term and Succession
7. World Gold Council — Gold Demand Trends Q1 2026: Technology Demand · Technology Sector Breakdown
8. Financial Times — Hyperscaler AI Capex 2026: $725 Billion Combined, April 2026
9. House of Commons Library — Interest Rates and Monetary Policy: UK Rate History
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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