Warning: The history of gold may repeat itself

Very few people truly understand what is happening right now.

Gold may be approaching one of the most significant turning points in years—but the reasons are not what most people think.

Let's go back to 2011:

After the global financial crisis, panic spread. Central banks injected massive liquidity into the market, inflation fears escalated, and gold prices soared to nearly $1,900, a historic high.

The public opinion at that time was uproarious:

"The gold market has just begun."

"A massive shortage is coming."

"A new era has arrived."

But then the situation changed—and almost no one mentioned it.

The global economy stabilized, the dollar strengthened, and central banks began to adjust their policy expectations.

Gold prices did not plummet within days—instead, they entered a long and brutal downtrend.

From 2011 to 2015, gold prices fell by about 45%.

Now let’s look at today:

Gold prices have rebounded strongly once again.

Market confidence is rising.

The old tune plays again.

"This is just the beginning."

"Gold will only go higher and higher."

But the brutal reality is:

Gold prices only rise in an environment of panic and liquidity easing.

Once central banks take more aggressive measures to control inflation…

Liquidity will tighten…

Gold will lose its biggest support.

At that point, the market may reverse—slow at first, then suddenly explode.

Currently, gold prices are extremely sensitive to the following factors:

• Interest rate expectations

• A stronger dollar

• Global liquidity conditions

• Geopolitical tensions

This does not mean that gold will necessarily crash tomorrow.

But it does mean that when most people feel the safest, risks are actually rising.

History does not repeat itself exactly—but it often rhymes.

Stay vigilant. Real market movements often occur when people feel most confident.

Follow my latest updates—I will be closely monitoring this change.