Gold prices continued to rally in early Asian trading on Monday, with bullion breaking through the $5,000 per troy ounce threshold for the first time in history.
At the time of writing, the price of gold had reached $5,078.70 per ounce, driven by heightened geopolitical tensions and growing investor demand for safe-haven assets amid fiscal concerns in major economies. The rally represents one of the most significant advances in the metal’s long-term trading history, extending gains that have already pushed prices more than 17% higher year-to-date.
Silver and other precious metals also hit record highs alongside gold’s surge, underscoring broad strength across the sector as the U.S. dollar weakened against major currencies.
The backdrop for gold’s remarkable ascent includes persistent macroeconomic uncertainty, policy ambiguity among central banks, and escalating geopolitical stress. Many institutional investors have increasingly allocated capital to gold as a hedge against inflationary pressures and potential monetary instability. While forecasts issued late last year already projected gold prices approaching or exceeding $5,000 in 2026, the actual move past this psychological and technical milestone represents a notably accelerated realization of those projections.
Analysts tracking the bullion market will be watching closely to see if heightened risk sentiment continues to sustain prices at these record levels, or if profit-taking and shifts in broader financial conditions prompt a retracement. Regardless, crossing the $5,000 mark stands as a defining moment for the precious metals complex and reflects the growing weight of macro forces reshaping commodity markets in the early part of 2026.
By Charles Kennedy for Oilprice.com
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