Abstract:Citi projects Gold could hit $5,000 as Copper prices surge on structural supply shortages, signaling a potential commodities super-cycle driven by energy transition and geopolitical hedging.

Global commodity markets are signaling a potential structural shift, with precious metals and industrial base metals rallying on a combination of geopolitical fear, supply constraints, and energy transition demand.
Citi has released a bullish forecast for the precious metals complex, projecting that Gold (XAU/USD) could reach $5,000 per ounce by Q1 2026. The bank cites a “crisis hedge” dynamic driven by three factors:
Silver is expected to outperform, with targets set as high as $100 per ounce, driven by the dual engine of monetary demand and industrial usage in photovoltaics.
Simultaneously, Copper prices have surged, breaching the $13,000/ton mark on the LME. The rally is fueling a debate between “artificial shortage” caused by potential US tariffs and “structural deficit” caused by a lack of mine supply.
The synchronized rise in gold and copper suggests markets are hedging against both currency debasement (Gold) and betting on a capital-intensive industrial cycle (Copper), despite the noise of short-term economic data.