Abstract:A perfect storm of geopolitical escalation and structural de-dollarization is driving commodities into a new super-cycle, with Gold (XAU/USD) and Crude Oil (WTI) at the epicenter.

A perfect storm of geopolitical escalation and structural de-dollarization is driving commodities into a new super-cycle, with Gold (XAU/USD) and Crude Oil (WTI) at the epicenter.
Gold prices shattered the $4,500/oz barrier in late December, capping a year of 70% gains. While retail and institutional demand is strong, the primary driver is the “sovereign put”—aggressive buying by Emerging Market central banks.
This is not a speculative bubble; it is a structural reallocation of global reserves away from US Treasuries. Major banks, including JPMorgan and Yardeni Research, have raised their 2026 targets to $5,000–$6,000, citing the inability of Western sanctions to deter the “de-dollarization” trend.
Crude oil prices have rebounded sharply from mid-December lows following the US government's decision to impose a naval “quarantine” on Venezuelan oil exports.
Strategists at Morgan Stanley warn that 2026 could see a “Commodity Burst.” Their thesis rests on a potential reversal of the “Goldilocks” USD strength. If the Fed cuts rates to support a “no-job productivity” economy while China stimulates demand, a weakening Dollar would act as rocket fuel for energy and metals, potentially creating a stagflationary headache for Western policymakers.

Malaysia’s retail gold prices have hit record highs, with 999 fine gold reaching RM700 per gram and 916 gold rising to RM650, driven by surging global gold prices, geopolitical tensions, and growing expectations of further US interest rate cuts.

XAU/USD (Spot Gold) suffered a catastrophic session, plummeting over $100, while Silver crashed 7.00%. The violent sell-off in precious metals marks a sharp decoupling from geopolitical risks, driven by a wave of profit-taking and an aggressive surge in "Risk-On" sentiment across equity markets.

The precious metals market staged a historic rally on Monday, with Spot Gold flirting with the $4,550 per ounce level and Silver skyrocketing over 5% to breach $83. The frenzy has triggered immediate risk management measures from the CME Group, while analysts point to aggressive Federal Reserve easing bets for 2026 as the primary driver.

Global financial markets are closing the year with a stark divergence in asset performance, characterized by a robust "Santa Rally" in traditional equities and precious metals, while speculative digital assets struggle with liquidity constraints.