Gold extends decline as tech-led selloff prompts investor liquidation Gold fell nearly 2% to $4,109.49 per ounce on June 23, 2026, as a tech-led selloff forced investors to liquidate positions, with Nvidia dropping over 4% and the Nasdaq falling 2.1%. The decline, driven by expectations of higher Federal Reserve rates, pulled gold further from its January all-time high of $5,608.35, raising questions about its role as a portfolio hedge. Gold extends decline as tech-led selloff prompts investor liquidation Gold slid nearly 2% on June 23 as Nvidia-led tech losses forced investors to sell the metal to cover equity positions, pulling prices further from January's all-time high. Gold has had a rough few weeks, and Tuesday made things worse. The metal fell 1.93% to $4,109.49 per ounce on June 23, 2026, as a sharp selloff in AI-sector stocks pushed investors to liquidate positions across asset classes to cover losses elsewhere. Tech stocks pulled the trigger The proximate cause was a broad retreat in high-valuation tech names. Nvidia fell more than 4%, with Micron and AMD also taking significant hits. The Nasdaq Composite dropped approximately 2.1% on the day. The selling pressure wasn’t random. Markets have been recalibrating around the expectation that the Federal Reserve will keep rates elevated, or push them higher. That’s a particularly uncomfortable environment for gold, which pays no yield. Bitcoin tracked the same trajectory. The largest crypto by market cap traded between $62,400 and $63,000 on June 23, pulled lower alongside other risk assets as tech weakness rippled through markets. The correlation between Bitcoin and gold during stress periods has become a recurring theme in 2026, with both assets moving in the same direction when rate expectations shift and equities sell off simultaneously. Context: gold is still up big, just not as big Gold hit an all-time high of $5,608.35 in January 2026. Even after the recent correction, the metal remains roughly 23% higher year-over-year. The current level around $4,109 represents a substantial pullback from that January peak, and includes a more than 10% decline over the preceding month. What this means for investors The simultaneous decline in gold and Bitcoin during a tech-driven equity selloff raises a question that matters for portfolio construction: are these assets actually providing diversification, or are they just additional risk-off casualties? Gold’s reputation as a portfolio hedge depends partly on it holding value when equities fall. When it drops nearly 2% on the same day the Nasdaq falls 2.1%, that diversification argument gets harder to make. Disclosure: This article was edited by Editorial Team. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy https://cryptobriefing.com/editorial-policy/ .