Who really sets gold prices? The traders behind the metal’s daily moves

Source Cryptopolitan

There is a small group of traders, analysts, and bullion specialists who monitor global markets full-time and then decide on its prices every single day.

These guys sit in offices across New York, London, Zurich, and Hong Kong, staring at screens while the rest of the world checks what gold costs on their phones, according to Yahoo Finance.

This small network of professionals sets the tone for what the world pays, from the bars stored in central bank vaults to the coins sold at retail counters.

How spot and futures define the global gold market

The market operates with two main prices: the spot price (what gold trades for right now per ounce) and the futures price (what gold will trade for at a date in the future).

The spot price is what investors refer to as the real-time value of gold in its pure, physical form. Think of it as the wholesale rate, not the number you’ll pay if you walk into a shop.

That’s because the retail price adds something called the gold premium, which covers refining, minting, marketing, dealer expenses, and profit margins. Add it all up, and you have what regular buyers actually pay.

Gold ETFs, like SPDR Gold Shares or iShares Gold Trust, closely track that spot price because they’re backed by physical reserves. In futures, some people cash out before the contract expires, while others take actual delivery. Either way, these contracts are traded on major exchanges, making them far more liquid than physical gold itself.

But what really changes the price comes down to supply and demand attached to events happening outside the trading floor.

Politics, inflation, and central banks drive demand

So far this year, global investors dumped riskier assets for gold, pushing futures up by 46% by September.

Central banks also play a huge role. They buy gold to hedge against inflation and protect national reserves from currency collapse. When the U.S. dollar weakened this year, central banks, especially those in Asia and the Middle East, began adding more gold to their holdings to reduce dependence on the dollar.

Interest rates are another point. When they’re up, gold tends to fall because it doesn’t yield interest. But when rates drop, gold becomes more attractive. Inflation has the opposite effect; higher inflation pushes investors to buy more gold, lifting prices. Mining production adds to that mix.

Rising production costs or supply shortages tighten global supply, often sending prices higher. Between April 1934 and July 1970, gold dropped 65%. From 1970 to 1980, it soared 850%. Then it crashed 82% between 1980 and 2001, before climbing 591% from 2001 to 2025.

Get seen where it counts. Advertise in Cryptopolitan Research and reach crypto’s sharpest investors and builders.

Disclaimer: For information purposes only. Past performance is not indicative of future results.
placeholder
BNB Price Rebounds as Traders React to CZ’s Pardon — But One Roadblock RemainsBNB is up 4.4% in the past 24 hours, standing out as the only top-10 coin to post positive 30-day gains (+11%). The move follows Trump’s pardon of former Binance CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao.
Author  Beincrypto
Yesterday 09: 47
BNB is up 4.4% in the past 24 hours, standing out as the only top-10 coin to post positive 30-day gains (+11%). The move follows Trump’s pardon of former Binance CEO Changpeng “CZ” Zhao.
placeholder
WTI Oil steadies above $61.00 as concerns about oversupply easeCrude prices’ pullback from two-week highs at $62.00 witnessed on Thursday remains contained above $61.00 so far, with the commodity on track to its sharpest weekly rally in four months.
Author  FXStreet
Yesterday 09: 33
Crude prices’ pullback from two-week highs at $62.00 witnessed on Thursday remains contained above $61.00 so far, with the commodity on track to its sharpest weekly rally in four months.
placeholder
Gold declines as traders brace for trade talks, US CPI inflation dataGold price (XAU/USD) edges lower below $4,150 during the Asian trading hours on Friday, pressured by the rebound in the US Dollar (USD).
Author  FXStreet
Yesterday 03: 51
Gold price (XAU/USD) edges lower below $4,150 during the Asian trading hours on Friday, pressured by the rebound in the US Dollar (USD).
placeholder
US CPI headline inflation set to rise 3.1% YoY in SeptemberThe United States (US) Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) will publish the all-important Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for September on Friday at 12:30 GMT.
Author  FXStreet
Yesterday 03: 49
The United States (US) Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) will publish the all-important Consumer Price Index (CPI) data for September on Friday at 12:30 GMT.
placeholder
WTI falls to near $61.00, downside appears limited due supply concernsWest Texas Intermediate (WTI) Oil price depreciates after three days of gains, trading around $61.00 per barrel during the Asian hours on Friday.
Author  FXStreet
Yesterday 02: 36
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) Oil price depreciates after three days of gains, trading around $61.00 per barrel during the Asian hours on Friday.
goTop
quote