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The Brutal Pattern Behind Gold and Silver's Surge: Will History Repeat Itself?
Many people have been asking the same question recently: Will gold continue to rise? Can silver catch up? These questions seem simple, but behind them lie brutal market laws that have been proven time and again. Instead of rushing to predict the future, it’s better to look at what the market has already experienced.
The First Lesson: The Volatility of 1979–1980
At that time, the world was facing multiple crises simultaneously. The ongoing oil crisis, runaway hyperinflation, escalating geopolitical conflicts—currencies around the world were repeatedly undermined, and investors scrambled for safe-haven assets.
Gold surged from $200 to $850, quadrupling in just a year. Silver performed even more astonishingly, jumping from $6 to $50, seemingly heralding a new era.
But the real story was far less romantic.
Within just two months, gold prices halved, and silver plummeted by two-thirds. Instead of a rebound, there followed a 20-year period of stagnation—prices kept falling, trading volumes shrank, and investor confidence was gradually eroded.
The Second Repetition: 2010–2011, A Familiar Scene
History is like a movie that keeps playing again. This time, the backdrop was the era after the global financial crisis, when central banks around the world flooded the markets with liquidity.
Gold shot from $1,000 to $1,921, nearly doubling. Silver again soared to $50, echoing scenes from a decade earlier. Optimistic voices filled the market—rising demand for decentralization, expectations of fiat currency devaluation, diversification in emerging markets… every reason seemed airtight.
But the familiar ending played out again: gold retraced 45%, and silver even fell by 70%. In the following years, the precious metals market entered cycles of decline, sideways trading, and cautious waiting, testing investors’ faith time and again.
The Iron Law Repeated by the Market
These two cycles reveal an almost physical law of the precious metals market: The more exaggerated the rise, the deeper the correction.
More importantly, each surge is backed by seemingly solid logic—whether it’s runaway inflation, liquidity flooding after a crisis, or international order starting to loosen. The fundamentals are never absent; what’s truly unpredictable is the timing of the market executing this logic.
Logic is always correct, but timing is the biggest trap.
What’s Different in This Gold and Silver Uptrend?
There are indeed some new developments. Central banks worldwide continue to increase gold reserves, de-dollarization is accelerating, and silver is gaining new narratives driven by AI chips and industrial demand. These factors support the prices of precious metals.
But what’s truly beyond traditional models is another layer of meaning: Current gold and silver prices are more like market pre-pricing of “potential systemic changes around 2027.”
This isn’t just simple trading logic; it’s a form of anticipatory pricing—various capital flows are positioning themselves for the worst-case scenario in advance.
The Real Choices of Central Banks and Super Capital
Looking at the distribution of global gold reserves helps us understand what the market is doing:
The U.S. leads with 8,133 tons, accounting for 75% of its foreign exchange reserves. Germany holds 3,350 tons. Italy, France, and Russia are also continuously accumulating reserves. China’s gold reserves are about 2,304 tons, ranking sixth worldwide.
It’s not just central banks acting; private capital is also entering, with ultra-rich individuals making early moves. All participants are doing the same thing: paying in advance for the worst-case scenario.
This collective consensus itself forms a market signal—whether or not it ultimately materializes, it has already influenced current prices.
How Should Ordinary Investors Respond?
The simplest advice is: Don’t gamble.
No one knows where the top is. Recklessly going all-in on gold and silver is essentially betting against history, which has already given a clear answer: gold’s average retracement exceeds 30%, and silver often drops 50% or more.
The current market has clearly moved beyond historical volatility ranges. When prices exceed normal historical levels, subsequent corrections tend to be even more severe than expected.
One Last Point to Understand
No matter how deep your faith in the new narratives of gold and silver, one fact remains unchanged: The more violent the rise, the greater the correction that follows.
Markets never rise for free. They will test your risk preparedness with a ruthless pullback at the moment you’re most confident.
This is only my personal analysis and does not constitute any investment advice.
A message to traders willing to learn from history rather than just stare at K-lines.