Gold Fell. China Bought Its Most in 17 Months. Here’s Why.

Five things drove gold and silver lower this week — a stronger dollar, spiking Treasury yields, the hottest US producer inflation in over three years, a new Federal Reserve chair, and a Trump-Xi summit with no deal. All five are documented and short-term. Meanwhile, the People’s Bank of China quietly made its largest gold purchase in 17 months. That contrast is the story.
Why Silver Falls Harder Than Gold — And What It Means

Silver fell 10× harder than gold on May 14, 2026 — not because of weakness, but because it runs on two demand engines: industrial and monetary. Three consecutive inflation beats repriced the industrial side. The monetary case got stronger.
India Gold Import Duty: Does a Hike Actually Kill Demand?

Indian rupee banknotes beside a 1000g fine gold bullion bar on a dark surface — illustrating India’s gold import duty hike and the rupee vs gold tension.
The Real Reason Gold Falls When Inflation Surges

April CPI hit 3.8% — and gold dropped. If that feels backwards, it should. Here’s the chain: hot inflation forced traders to reprice the Fed toward rate hikes, which lifted the dollar, which pressured gold. The short-term mechanics and the long-term case are two different things — and today is a perfect illustration of why.
CPI Hits 3.8%. Gold Falls. The Mechanism Nobody Explains

April CPI just printed 3.8% — the highest reading since May 2023 — and gold is down anyway. A new hawkish Fed chair takes over Friday, the Strait of Hormuz is still closed, and central banks bought through gold’s entire 16% correction from its January high. Here’s what each of those facts actually means for long-term holders.
Why the Gold Silver Ratio Is Falling — and What It Means

The gold/silver ratio dropped from 62.05 to 54.94 in under a week — one of the fastest compressions in recent memory. Two forces drove it, and history offers a clear parallel for what tends to follow.
India’s ‘Patriotic’ Gold Buying Freeze: What It Means for Prices

India’s PM just asked 1.4 billion people to stop buying gold for a year. The world’s second-largest gold market going quiet has real implications for global bullion prices — and a bigger message for Western investors.
Jobs Beat, Ceasefire, Deficit: What It Means for Gold

April payrolls smashed forecasts, the U.S.-Iran ceasefire held under pressure, and the OMB projected a $2.065 trillion deficit. Gold barely moved. Five briefs explain why the structural case for physical gold is stronger than any single headline.
Why Peace Is Bullish for Gold in 2026 (And War Isn’t)

War usually pushes gold higher. But since Operation Epic Fury began in February 2026, the opposite has played out — gold sells off on escalation and rallies on peace. The reason ties back to fiscal dominance, oil prices, and the path to lower interest rates. This article breaks down the pattern, the macro logic behind it, and what it means for short-term and long-term gold investors.
Why Central Banks Sell Gold — And What It Means for Prices

Central banks bought 863 tonnes of gold in 2025. Yet Russia, Turkey, and others are selling. Here’s what drives official-sector gold sales — and what the history of central bank selling tells long-term investors about price risk.
