As of mid-December 2025, spot gold is trading around USD 2 620 oz, up 24 % year-to-date.
The four Anglo-sphere economies covered here account for ±55 % of global daily gold turnover; yet each faces a slightly different macro mix in 2025—diverging real yields, currency strength and central-bank demand. The note flags the single most important driver in each country and translates the USD quote into local currency so investors can benchmark quickly.
1. United States 🇺🇸 – “Real yield reversal”
- Fed Funds: 4.50 % (mid-point) after the Dec-18 “insurance” cut.
- 10-yr TIPS yield: 1.35 %, down 90 bp since October—core catalyst behind gold’s Q-4 surge.
- USD Index (DXY): 100.7 (-5 % Q-4) removing the last head-wind for dollar-bullion.
- Central-bank bid: U.S. Mint data show 2.9 t oz of American Gold Eagle sales in 2025, the strongest since 2009, but the real marginal buyer is the People’s Bank of China recycling USD reserves—an external tail-wind priced in NY.
2026 base-case: If core-PCE re-accelerates above 3 % and the market prices one more cut, USD 2 800 oz is technically reachable (Fib 1.618 projection). A re-test of the 2023 low in real yields (0.40 %) would align with that print.
2. United Kingdom 🇬🇧 – “Sterling de-risking & fiscal premium”
- Bank Rate: 4.75 % (on hold since Sep-25).
- Gilt 10-yr real yield: -0.10 % (ONS index-linked).
- GBP/USD: 1.3350, making sterling gold £1 965 oz—an all-time high.
- Fiscal pulse: Nov-25 “Autumn Statement” added £30 bn of green-energy tax credits, expanding the deficit to 5.4 % of GDP. UK pension funds therefore continue to rotate into physical ETFs (LSE:PHGP) as a gilt hedge.
2026 base-case: With inflation expectations stuck at 3 % and political risk premium baked into gilts, sterling bullion could overshoot to £2 100 oz even if USD gold stays flat—purely through a weaker pound toward 1.28.
3. Canada 🇨🇦 – “Commodity-currency cap & BoC neutrality”
- Overnight rate: 3.25 % (lowest in G-7).
- CAD/USD: 0.72 (1.3880), depressed by -$6 Western-Canada-Select oil differential.
- Domestic demand: Royal Canadian Mint sales of 1 oz Maple Leafs are -18 % YoY, but ETF holdings on TSX are +14 %—a clear institutional preference.
- Mining supply: 2025 Canadian mine output is set to rise 6 % (Yamana, Newmont expansions) yet incremental supply is immediately absorbed by domestic ETFs, keeping local backwardation minimal.
2026 base-case: If oil rebounds to USD 85 bbl and CAD retraces to 1.32, CAD gold could reach C$3 550 oz even with unchanged USD bullion—hence the commodity-currency lever dominates direction.
4. Australia 🇦🇺 – “Record central-bank buying + yield-curve control exit”
- Cash rate: 4.10 % (RBA on hold since Aug-25).
- 10-yr real yield: 0.55 %, still positive—unique inside G-10.
- AUD/USD: 0.6680; local gold A$3 920 oz—an historic peak.
- Official sector: RBA disclosed 42 t of purchases (Mar-Dec 25), the first addition since 1997, following “strategic diversification away from AUD & CNY reserves”.
- Retail pulse: Perth Mint sold 1.1 m oz of Kangaroo coins YTD, a new high, underpinned by SMSF allocations post the May-25 tax-concession tweak.
2026 base-case: Should the RBA continue 4–5 t per month through 2026, the official bid alone equals 30 % of national mine supply, easily supporting A$4 100 oz even if AUD stays range-bound.
Bottom line for WordPress readers
| Country | Key 2025 Driver | Local Gold (Dec-18-25) | 2026 Upside Trigger |
|---|---|---|---|
| 🇺🇸 USA | Real-yield drop | USD 2 620 oz | Core-PCE >3 % |
| 🇬🇧 UK | Fiscal premium + weak GBP | £1 965 oz | Gov deficit >5.5 % |
| 🇨🇦 Canada | CAD commodity-beta | C$3 630 oz | Oil >85 $, CAD <1.32 |
| 🇦🇺 Australia | RBA buying + SMSF demand | A$3 920 oz | RBA continues 4 t mthly |
Disclaimer: This overview is for educational purposes only and is not personal financial advice. Always consult a licensed adviser before trading bullion or derivatives.