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Gold (GC=F) April futures opened at $5,084 per troy ounce on Friday, down 0.8% from Thursday’s closing price of $5,125.80. The gold price declined in early trading.

Gold demand is under pressure due to high oil prices and their impact on the U.S. dollar and short-term inflation outlook. Since the U.S. is a major global oil producer that exports more than it imports, rising oil prices can strengthen the U.S. dollar. In the last five days, the U.S. Dollar Index (DX-Y.NYB) has increased about 1%. The index is also up 3.3% in the past month. Higher oil prices can also introduce inflationary pressure at a time when inflation has remained above the Fed’s long-term 2% target for years. Earlier this year, traders had expected the Fed to cut interest rates twice in 2026. Those rate reductions are unlikely to happen if a new inflationary trend takes hold in the U.S.

A stronger dollar makes gold more expensive, while lingering high interest rates make gold less attractive relative to cash and other interest-bearing assets.

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The opening price of April gold futures on Friday was 0.8% lower than Thursday’s close. Here’s a look at how the gold price has changed versus last week, month, and year:

One week ago: -0.7%

One month ago: +2.6%

One year ago: +73.1%

On Jan. 29, gold’s one-year gain was 95.6%.

24/7 gold price tracking: Don't forget you can monitor the current price of gold on Yahoo Finance 24 hours a day, seven days a week.

Want to learn more about the current top-performing companies in the gold industry? Explore a list of the top-performing companies in the gold industry using the Yahoo Finance Screener. You can create your own screeners with over 150 different screening criteria.

A gold investment can add stability and inflation protection to your portfolio. But it can also dilute your gains when stock prices are rising quickly. Finding the right balance between gold’s diversification benefits and profiting from growth potential in other assets can be challenging.

Even the experts are divided on how to achieve the correct balance. Below, five experts explain their recommended gold allocations, which range from 0% to 20%.

Learn more: How to invest in gold in 4 steps

Robert R. Johnson, professor at Creighton University’s Heider College of Business, does not advocate gold investing. In his words, “while having a small position in precious metals may dampen portfolio volatility in the short-run, the tradeoff between slightly dampened volatility and the lost long-term return is certainly not a prudent one, particularly for Gen Z/millennials with long investing time horizons.”

Brett Elliott, director of content and SEO at American Precious Metals Exchange (APMEX), recommends setting an allocation that aligns with your investing goals.

Growth-oriented investors may be comfortable with an allocation of 10% or 15%, according to Elliott. But income investors will prefer a smaller position, because gold provides no yield. A 2% to 5% gold allocation can provide some resiliency without an excessive drag on income potential.

Learn more: Who decides what gold is worth? How gold prices are determined.

Blake McLaughlin, executive vice president at Axcap Ventures, said historical data support a gold allocation of 5% to 8%. “Gold may not offer the outsized return potential of private investments, but the metal holds a set of attributes that are increasingly hard to ignore,” according to McLaughlin. Those attributes include the metal’s resilience amid economic uncertainty and geopolitical unrest.

Thomas Winmill, portfolio manager at Midas Funds, believes most investors will benefit from a long-term gold allocation of 5% to 15%. Winmill specifically advocates investing in gold mining companies through a mutual fund.

Your risk tolerance and current mix of financial versus hard assets can guide you to an appropriate allocation, according to Winmill.

Risk tolerance: Keep your allocation percentage low if you tend to panic in volatile cycles.

Financial vs. hard assets: Financial assets are stocks and bonds. Hard assets include tangible items like real estate, gold, collectibles, classic cars, and equipment. If you have no home equity and your wealth is primarily in financial assets, you can set your gold allocation higher. Or, if your home is paid for and more valuable than your stock portfolio, gold investing may not be necessary.

Learn more: Thinking of buying gold? Here's what investors should watch for.

Vince Stanzione, CEO and founder at First Information, recommends a 20% gold allocation, specifically in physical gold or a gold ETF. Stanzione argues for a higher exposure to gold as a wealth protection strategy. As he says, “gold keeps with inflation and gold retains its purchasing power,” while paper currencies are devaluing around the world.

Learn more: Gold IRA: Benefits, risks, and how it differs from a traditional IRA

Whether you’re tracking the price of gold since last month or last year, the price-of-gold chart below shows the precious metal’s steady upward climb in value.

Learn more: Gold alternatives? How to invest in silver, platinum, and palladium.

The two primary gold prices investors should know are spot prices and gold futures prices. Learn the difference, the historical price of gold, and the current dynamics.

Learn how to invest in gold by considering gold's strengths, historic behavior, and the pros and cons of physical gold versus gold mining stocks and ETFs.

Gold has the same high-level risk as any investment. Would-be gold investors should understand the risks associated with price, speculation, opportunity cost, and fraud.

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