Gold | 2025-10-29 13:07:55
The rising geopolitical tensions across the globe and uncertainties over U.S. tariffs are among the key factors that may drive gold prices in future, they pointed out.

SEATTLE (Scrap Monster): At the annual London Bullion Market Association (LBMA) conference, delegates projected that gold prices could climb close to $5,000 per ounce within the next year. The forecast pegs the yellow metal at around $4,980 per ounce, marking a substantial 27% increase from current levels.
Experts at the event noted that gold is on course to post its strongest annual performance since 1979, having already surged 52% year-to-date. Prices have broken key psychological barriers, surpassing $3,000 per ounce in March and $4,000 per ounce in October 2025. According to delegates, ongoing geopolitical conflicts, coupled with economic uncertainty and U.S. tariff policies, are likely to continue fueling demand for the safe-haven asset.
The LBMA’s outlook aligns closely with a recent Reuters poll, which estimated the average gold price for 2026 at $4,275 per ounce.
Meanwhile, other precious metals have also witnessed sharp gains this year. Silver has advanced 62%, while platinum and palladium have risen by 76% and 54%, respectively. The LBMA expects these metals to reach $1,816 per ounce for platinum and $1,709 per ounce for palladium in the coming year.
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How should investors approach gold allocation?
Financial experts suggest gold should constitute 5-15% of diversified portfolios depending on risk tolerance. Research shows a 60/20/20 equity/bond/gold portfolio has outperformed traditional 60/40 allocations since 2020. Investors should consider dollar-cost averaging strategies rather than attempting to time entry points precisely, given gold's historical volatility within longer-term bull trends.
What represents the main risk to the bullish gold outlook?
Potential headwinds include: unexpected resolution of major geopolitical conflicts reducing safe-haven demand; aggressive Federal Reserve tightening driving real rates substantially higher; stronger-than-expected U.S. dollar appreciation; breakthrough diplomatic agreements reducing trade tensions; or reversal of central bank accumulation strategies. However, the structural debt burden makes long-term gold support likely regardless of near-term tactical shifts.
Delegates at the LBMA annual conference forecast gold prices to reach around $4,980 per ounce, approaching the $5,000 mark within a year — a gain of nearly 27% from current levels.
Experts cited geopolitical tensions, economic uncertainties, and U.S. trade and tariff policies as the main forces boosting demand for gold as a safe-haven asset.
Gold has recorded a 52% surge year-to-date, its strongest rise since 1979, breaking through the key resistance levels of $3,000 in March and $4,000 in October.
Gold has reached unprecedented levels due to a convergence of factors: aggressive central bank buying (over 3,200 tons accumulated during 2022-2024), record ETF inflows ($64 billion year-to-date), heightened geopolitical tensions, U.S. dollar weakness (12% depreciation in 2025), and concerns about global debt levels exceeding $315 trillion. The metal has surged 52% year-to-date, its strongest performance since 1979.