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Gold prices surge as global uncertainty drives investors toward safe assets

Gold has served as a refuge for wealth for millennia, and the logic behind its price spikes reveals how fear moves financial markets.

By The Daily World · Published 4 July 2026, 6:23 am

Updated 12 July 2026, 11:20 am

Gold prices surge as global uncertainty drives investors toward safe assets
Photo via Freepik

Gold is one of the few assets that tends to become more expensive precisely when everything else looks fragile. When stock markets fall, currencies wobble, or geopolitical tensions climb, investors around the world move money into gold. Understanding why this happens means understanding something fundamental about how trust and risk function in the global economy.

Gold as a store of value

Unlike a share or a bond, gold pays no dividend and carries no promise of repayment. Its value rests entirely on the collective belief that it will hold purchasing power over time. That belief has proved durable across cultures and centuries. Governments cannot print gold. No single country controls its supply. Those two properties make it unusual in a world of paper and digital money, where central banks can expand the money supply at will.

Gold is priced globally in US dollars, so its value also moves when the dollar weakens. If a dollar buys fewer goods, it also buys less gold in real terms, which tends to push the quoted price up.

Why fear drives the price higher

During periods of calm, investors typically prefer assets that generate returns: shares, property, bonds. During periods of uncertainty, the calculation shifts. A sharp drop in confidence about the future makes guaranteed losses from holding a non-yielding asset like gold look more attractive than uncertain losses on riskier assets.

This pattern is sometimes called a flight to safety. It is not unique to gold; government bonds of stable countries see the same dynamic. But gold has the advantage of existing outside any single government's balance sheet, which matters when the fear is about governments or banking systems specifically.

Central banks and the gold market

Central banks around the world hold gold as part of their foreign reserves. Some nations have increased their holdings in recent years as a way of reducing dependence on the US dollar in their reserve mix. When central banks buy gold in quantity, it reduces available supply and pushes prices higher, independent of what retail or institutional investors are doing.

The gold market is also influenced by real interest rates, meaning interest rates after adjusting for inflation. When real rates are negative or low, the opportunity cost of holding gold falls, making it comparatively more attractive. When real rates rise sharply, gold often loses its appeal.

What it means for Australia

Australia is one of the world's largest gold producers, and the sector contributes significantly to export earnings. When the gold price rises in US dollar terms, Australian miners benefit doubly if the Australian dollar is also weaker, because their costs are in Australian dollars while their revenue is in US dollars. Rising gold prices therefore support Australian mining company revenues, employment in gold-producing regions, and government royalty receipts. For Australian investors, gold-linked assets in superannuation funds or listed miners move with global gold sentiment, meaning events on the other side of the planet have direct portfolio consequences.

The bottom line

Gold rises in price when confidence falls because it sits outside the systems that are losing trust. For Australia, that dynamic is not abstract: the country is a major producer, and a global flight to safety can translate into real revenue and employment at home.

This article was compiled by AI and screened before publishing. See our editorial standards.

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