Why do the historical cycles of gold and silver always end in tragedy, from the oil crisis to geopolitical conflicts?

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The story of gold and silver has never been a fairy tale. Every seemingly unstoppable rally hides a brutal truth: ultimately ending in a devastating crash. This is no coincidence but a pattern repeatedly validated by the market.

Recently, many investors are asking: “Will gold continue to soar? Is silver finally catching up?” Before answering, we need to look at history. History has given two clear answers.

The First Shock Rally (1979-1980): From Chaos to Collapse in Just Two Months

It was an era of global turmoil. The oil crisis triggered worldwide economic shocks, hyperinflation spread, geopolitical conflicts escalated, and currencies were repeatedly devalued. Against this backdrop, gold and silver were seen as ultimate safe havens.

Numbers speak loudest:

Gold: surged from $200 to $850 (quadrupled in a year)
Silver: skyrocketed from $6 to $50 (taking off directly)

It seemed like the “beginning of a new order,” with gold and silver redefining the world wealth system. Investors embraced this narrative, convinced the worst times had arrived, and the era of safe-haven assets had begun.

But reality slapped the market.

In just two months:

  • Gold was halved, dropping back to around $420
  • Silver lost two-thirds, falling to about $16

In the following 20 years, gold entered a long period of stagnation, and investor confidence was repeatedly eroded.

The Second Repetition (2010-2011): Liquidity Traps After the Financial Crisis

After the 2008 financial crisis, global central banks entered an era of frantic money printing. Facing the threat of economic collapse, policymakers unleashed their ultimate weapon: unlimited liquidity. Gold and silver were reignited.

History astonishingly repeated itself:

Gold: climbed from $1,000 to $1,921
Silver: again surged to $50 (the same level as in 1979)

This time, the narrative was even more compelling: global currency devaluation, negative real interest rates, asset allocation deserts. All logic favored the bulls.

But the ending was equally cruel:

  • Gold retraced 45%
  • Silver plummeted 70%

In the following years, investors experienced a rollercoaster of declines, sideways movements, and endless psychological torment.

A Market Law Proven Twice: The Steep Rise Means a Fierce Correction

If the first rally was perhaps a coincidence, the second confirmed a physical law: The crazier the rise, the harsher the fall.

And there’s a noteworthy detail: every rally seems “completely justified.”

Logic is always present:

  • Out-of-control inflation threats
  • Post-crisis liquidity flooding
  • Signs of global order loosening
  • The impact on the US dollar’s credibility

But logic is never enough; timing is always the cruelest. Markets never move in a rational rhythm. They only wake everyone up with a sudden pullback when everyone is most confident.

Are Central Banks, Tycoons, and Capital All In? Is This Time Really Different?

Today, we face a different situation. New factors are stacking up:

  • Continued accumulation by central banks: Countries accelerating gold purchases
  • De-dollarization acceleration: Emerging markets gradually reducing dollar reserves
  • A new narrative for silver: Growing industrial demand from AI chips, green energy industries

These factors are real, but they only change the magnitude of the price move, not the fundamental logic of the trend.

More importantly, all participants are doing the same thing:

The US holds 8,133 tons of gold reserves (75% of its foreign exchange reserves)
Germany, Italy, France, Russia are increasing their holdings
China’s gold reserves are about 2,304 tons, ranking sixth globally

Central banks are buying, private capital is entering, super-rich are positioning early. This isn’t about trading logic; it’s about pre-emptive pricing—paying in advance for the worst-case scenario.

Paying in Advance for the Worst-Case Scenario: The Current Gold Pricing Logic

A hypothesis worth deep consideration: The current gold price is more like a “price prepared for around 2027, for potential large-scale conflicts or systemic crises.”

This isn’t based on spot supply but on risk expectations. Investors and central banks are asking: if the worst happens, what should gold be worth? They are answering this question by paying now.

Don’t Be Fooled by History: The Correct Attitude for Ordinary Investors

Returning to the initial question: what should ordinary people do?

One thing first: Don’t gamble.

No one knows where the top is. Going all-in recklessly is essentially betting against history. And history has already given two answers:

  • Gold typically retraces over 30%
  • Silver often drops more than 50%

Current market conditions are already clearly diverging from historical volatility ranges. In this situation, chasing highs is akin to playing with fire.

The Final Point to Understand

The faster the rise, the bigger the correction will be. This is an eternal physical law of markets.

Markets never owe you a rise, but they will test your preparedness with a sudden pullback when you are most confident. The history of gold and silver shows these tests always come suddenly and are executed thoroughly.

This is just personal reflection and not investment advice.

A message for those willing to study history rather than just look at candlestick charts.

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