$XAU
Everyone talks about the first phase of the 1979 oil crisis.
Geopolitical tension surged, oil prices exploded, and gold went parabolic — rising from around $200 to $850.
It felt like a new financial era had begun.
But that wasn’t the real story.
The real lesson came after the rally.
The Federal Reserve lost control of inflation, then reacted aggressively. Interest rates were pushed close to 20%. Liquidity dried up across markets.
And gold?
It didn’t protect investors.
It collapsed — from $850 down to nearly $300.
Now look at today’s environment.
The 2026 setup is starting to look familiar: $XAU
Rising geopolitical tension in the Middle East
Oil prices pushing higher again
Supply-side pressure building
Inflation quietly reappearing
This is where most investors get it wrong.
Gold feels like safety.
But it’s only safe while liquidity supports it.
Here’s the critical dynamic:
As long as liquidity remains loose, gold can continue to rise.
But once inflation forces central banks to tighten, the environment changes completely.
If oil continues to drive inflation higher, central banks — especially the Federal Reserve — may be forced to stay restrictive or even tighten further.
That’s when the shift happens.
Not during the crisis.
But after it.
Right now:
Retail investors are accumulating gold
The bullish narrative is strengthening
Confidence is rising
And historically, that’s when risk starts increasing.
If history rhymes, the sequence is simple:
Crisis → Gold rally
Policy reaction → Liquidity drain
Then → Sharp repricing lower
Gold doesn’t collapse when fear is at its peak.
It collapses when policy turns against it.
And we may be closer to that turning point than most realize.
#gold #XAUUSD