Gold Price in 2004
Full 2004 gold price record from LBMA AM/PM benchmark: annual high, low, average XAU/USD, monthly breakdown, and the macro events behind each major move. Updated daily.
- Updated
- Real-time LBMA & ECN data
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This page covers the XAU/USD gold price for 2004: annual high, low, and average based on LBMA AM/PM fixes, the macro events that drove significant price moves, and historical context from the 1945-to-present LBMA dataset. Prices in USD per troy ounce (31.1035 g). Source: LBMA via Swissquote ECN.
2004Key Facts
- Year
- 2004
- Price basis
- XAU/USD per troy ounce (LBMA fix)
- Data source
- LBMA AM/PM benchmark
- Coverage
- 1 Jan – 31 Dec 2004
- Historical context
- 1945 to present
- Last refresh
- 2026-06-05
What this means
The 2004 gold price reflected the macro environment of that year — central bank policy, inflation dynamics, geopolitical events, and currency markets. LBMA data shows XAU/USD has ranged from $35/oz in the Bretton Woods era to all-time highs above $2,400/oz in 2024, shaped by pivotal macro shifts at each stage.
Annual gold returns are best understood in the context of real interest rates (the opportunity cost of holding non-yielding gold) and the US dollar (the inverse-correlated reserve currency). Years in which the Fed cut rates or allowed real rates to go negative have historically been bullish for gold; years of aggressive rate hikes have been bearish.
Goldetect's 2004 record draws on the LBMA AM/PM benchmark plus aggregated macro context from 40+ news sources classified by Gemini AI. Use the month-by-month navigation below to drill into specific catalysts; cross-reference with the methodology page for data lineage.
Reading the annual gold price. The LBMA publishes AM and PM benchmark fixes on every London business day. Annual high and low refer to the highest and lowest single daily fix in 2004. Annual average = arithmetic mean of all daily PM fixes. Year-over-year return = (close 2004 / close 2003 − 1) × 100%.
Historical context. Gold's price history since 1945 spans four regimes: (1) Bretton Woods fixed rate 1944–1971 ($35/oz); (2) post-Nixon free float and 1970s inflation spike (peak $850 in 1980); (3) long bear market 1980–2001 ($850 → $250); (4) modern bull market 2001–present driven by ETF financialization, central bank demand, and de-dollarization flows.
Why 2004 matters. Every year in the LBMA dataset reflects a unique combination of monetary policy, inflation, geopolitics, and market structure. Understanding what drove gold in 2004 provides context for interpreting current price moves and building a mental model of gold behavior across different macro regimes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What was the gold price in 2004?
Gold in 2004 is tracked via daily LBMA AM/PM fixes (XAU/USD per troy ounce). Goldetect aggregates the annual high, low, and average from the official benchmark series and contextualizes each major move with macro headlines from the same period. Primary source: LBMA International Financial Statistics.What drove gold prices in 2004?
Gold prices in any year are driven by changes in US real interest rates, the USD index, central bank reserve demand, and geopolitical risk events. The detail section above and Goldetect's month-by-month pages for 2004 cover the specific catalysts that produced the biggest single-day and weekly moves.How does 2004 compare to other years in gold history?
Gold has ranged from $35/oz (Bretton Woods era) to $2,400+/oz (2024 highs). 2004 can be placed in context by examining whether real yields were rising or falling, whether the dollar was strengthening or weakening, and whether central banks were net buyers or sellers.Where can I find official gold price data for 2004?
The authoritative source is the LBMA, which publishes historical AM and PM fix data. FRED (stlouisfed.org) has the GOLDAMGBD228NLBM series from 1968. For 1945–1967, the Bretton Woods fixed price of $35/oz applies.