🚨 Gold May Crash the Global Market Next Week
Gold has surged nearly 85% in the past 12 months—and while that sounds bullish, history suggests it may actually be dangerous.
Whenever gold goes parabolic, it doesn’t move in a straight line forever. In fact, past cycles show that explosive rallies are often followed by sharp corrections that catch late buyers off guard.
A Look at Past Parabolic Gold Tops
1980 Gold peaked near $850, then collapsed 40–60%, taking years to recover.
2011 After topping around $1,920, gold fell roughly 43% over the following years.
2020 Gold hit $2,075, corrected 20–25%, and then moved sideways for an extended period.
The Pattern Is Hard to Ignore
After rallies of 60–85%, gold typically:
Corrects 20–40%
Trades sideways for years
Resets market expectations
This doesn’t mean gold is weak—it means it behaves like a hedge, not a momentum stock.
