Home » MARC 2025 Highlights: Five Key Gold Talking Points

MARC 2025 Highlights: Five Key Gold Talking Points

Analysts and investors focus on gold market drivers as MARC 2025 sets the tone for commodity outlook

by Adedotun Oyeniyi

Key Points


  • MARC 2025 gold talking points dominated investor sentiment and commodity outlook.

  • Central banks remain pivotal to sustaining gold demand globally.

  • Geopolitical tensions fuel gold’s role as a safe-haven asset.


All eyes will be on MARC 2025, where gold will continue to be the main topic of conversation as global markets struggle with inflation, changing monetary policy, and a renewed desire for safe-haven assets. The forum is influencing the story of the most durable precious metal in the world by uniting investors, mining executives, and policymakers.

Prices are only one aspect of the arguments. Participants are considering both short-term catalysts and long-term fundamentals as a result of central banks purchasing gold in record quantities and geopolitical tensions maintaining high volatility. Here are the top five things to remember.

Central banks maintain the demand for gold worldwide

According to a report by Mining review, the demand profile for gold remains anchored by central banks. Purchases increased more than 20 percent in 2024, according to data presented at MARC 2025, continuing a trend of diversifying reserves away from the US dollar. Analysts caution that this change may sustain gold prices for the ensuing ten years.

Investor demand for gold is driven by geopolitical risks

Gold’s appeal as a hedge is being strengthened by the Middle East’s turmoil, the U.S.-China relationship, and Russia’s war in Ukraine. At the conference, fund managers concurred that gold is still one of the few assets that can hold its value over extended periods of uncertainty, especially when other commodities are susceptible to supply disruptions.

The occasion also highlighted the ways in which technology is changing the efficiency of mining.

Lower-carbon refining, automation, and AI-driven exploration are thought to be essential for supplying future demand while reducing environmental harm. In an industry that has historically been beset by high extraction costs, executives pointed out that such innovations could change cost structures.

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