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⚡️ Friends, behind the gold pullback is not a simple replay of history in 1979, but the old system shaking?
Recently gold has fallen over 15-20% (pulling back from nearly $5600 at the high to the $4300-$4400 range), and many people are comparing it to 1979. But looking closely, this time is completely different. It's not a simple technical adjustment, but a signal that the global credit system is being repriced.
The 1979 gold crash: US confidence rebuilding + Volcker's extreme rate hike (rates near 20%). The attractiveness of dollar assets surged, capital flowed back to the US, and gold as a non-yielding asset was naturally abandoned. That was when American unipolar hegemony began to be established, and market confidence recovered.
Today? Completely different. US fiscal deficits have hit their limit, US debt has exploded, there's limited room for high interest rates, and it's impossible to solve inflation with a one-size-fits-all approach like back then.
Middle East conflicts are not even a local event: energy supply disruptions, elevated oil prices, shipping blockades directly impact the petrodollar settlement system. If energy trading gradually de-dollarizes, the global financial anchor point will loosen.
So this gold pullback is more like short-term profit-taking and market rebalancing. Not a long-term negation of gold's safe-haven properties.
Gold is essentially a tool to hedge global credit risk. Against the backdrop of challenges to the dollar's credit foundation and systemic instability, it remains a key asset.
Unlike the rate hike rescue of 1979, today is a confluence of multiple crises: Middle East, energy, inflation, debt. The gold of the future may no longer be just an inflation hedge tool, but a core anchor point in the global financial repricing process.
The current pullback is part of this transformation. What's your take? Short-term washout or a signal of systemic inflection? Welcome to discuss.
This article was not charged and is just personal sharing!