Despite Mainstream Pessimism, Gold Still Shines: Why the Bull Market Isn’t Over

Money Metals Midweek Memo host Mike Maharrey isn’t buying the recent bearish turn in gold forecasts from Wall Street.

In this week’s podcast, he pushes back against the prevailing optimism in financial markets and lays out a compelling, data-backed case for why gold and silver still have room to run.

As major institutions like Citigroup predict gold could fall below $3,000 an ounce by year’s end, Maharrey warns that investors are ignoring the deeper structural forces that continue to fuel demand for real money.

Tariffs Aren’t the Only Threat

Financial analysts are breathing a little easier as U.S.–China trade tensions appear to be cooling. With signs that President Trump’s aggressive tariff policy is giving way to negotiation, optimism is returning to the stock market—and gold is being left out in the cold.

Citigroup now projects the yellow metal will retreat, arguing that easing geopolitical concerns and improving economic sentiment reduce the need for a safe-haven asset.

But Maharrey isn’t convinced. He argues that Wall Street is mistaking a short-term development for a long-term solution. Even if tariffs fade from the headlines, the underlying fragilities in the U.S. economy remain.

In his words, believing that a return to pre-tariff conditions means we’ve sidestepped danger is “dangerously naive.”