DBS: Gold's Long-Term Bullish Trend Intact, Target Price Seen at $5100 by Second Half of 2026

Deep News12-23 17:32

DBS Group Holdings (D05.SI) recently released its Q1 2026 investment outlook report, maintaining that despite recent price corrections, gold's long-term bullish trend remains firmly supported. Driven by currency devaluation risks, geopolitical uncertainties, and sustained central bank purchases, the bank projects gold to reach $5,100 per ounce by the second half of 2026. The report also recommends investors explore alternative assets like private equity to seek alpha returns as traditional "Easy Alpha" opportunities diminish.

**Gold: Dips Are Buying Opportunities** The report analyzed gold's volatile performance in H2 2025—a 32.4% surge from August to October followed by a sharp 10% pullback in late October. DBS views this correction as healthy profit-taking rather than a reversal of gold's upward trajectory.

Key bullish drivers include: - The expanding U.S. national debt ($36 trillion and rising), with Trump-era fiscal policies exacerbating currency devaluation risks. - Central banks' persistent demand, having purchased over 1,000 tons annually from 2022-2024. Even at record-high prices in 2025, official sector buying is estimated at 750-900 tons. Notably, central banks' gold reserves now exceed their U.S. Treasury holdings in value.

DBS raised its gold forecasts to $4,500 (H1 2026) and $5,100 (H2 2026), with models suggesting $6,600/oz by 2030 based on nominal GDP growth assumptions.

**Alternative Assets: Private Equity's Valuation Edge** With the "Easy Alpha era" fading as legendary investors like Buffett see narrowing outperformance, the report highlights private equity's appeal. The valuation gap between private markets and public equities (e.g., S&P 500) has widened to 4.1x—the most attractive in a decade. Fed rate cuts are expected to revive IPO/M&A activity in 2026, supporting exit opportunities.

Private credit also demonstrates resilience, with senior secured loans maintaining manageable default risks despite isolated credit events.

**Strategy: Hybrid Portfolios via Evergreen Funds** To address illiquidity concerns, DBS advocates using evergreen funds—which maintain liquidity buffers—for alternative allocations. These offer early distributions and redemption flexibility while matching closed-end fund returns long-term.

The bank recommends hybrid portfolios blending public and private assets to mitigate volatility, employing techniques like unsmoothing for more accurate risk-adjusted return assessments.

Disclaimer: Investing carries risk. This is not financial advice. The above content should not be regarded as an offer, recommendation, or solicitation on acquiring or disposing of any financial products, any associated discussions, comments, or posts by author or other users should not be considered as such either. It is solely for general information purpose only, which does not consider your own investment objectives, financial situations or needs. TTM assumes no responsibility or warranty for the accuracy and completeness of the information, investors should do their own research and may seek professional advice before investing.

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