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Is Gold Soaring for the Right Reasons or Are We in a Speculative Echo Bubble?
Global Market News ^ | 11/05/2025

Posted on 11/05/2025 9:47:21 AM PST by SeekAndFind

Gold has entered its third major breakout in the past half-century, and investors are divided on what’s really driving it. The last two run-ups in the 1970s and early 2010s ended badly for late buyers. Yet this year’s explosive move has sparked a wave of optimism rooted in one assumption: this time is different.

That phrase has a dangerous history. Carmen Reinhart and Kenneth Rogoff used it as the title of their book on recurring financial disasters, a reminder that bubbles often disguise themselves as “new eras.”

Gold, traditionally viewed as the antidote to reckless governments and unstable currencies, has doubled over the last two years. Supporters see that as validation. Skeptics see a familiar warning sign: rapid price gains fueled not by fundamentals, but by fear and momentum.

A Look Back: The Last Two Gold Surges Didn’t End Well

Gold doubled in both 1979-80 and 2010-11 during periods of heightened anxiety about the Federal Reserve and inflation. In the late 1970s, investors assumed the Fed would bow to political pressure. After the financial crisis, there were widespread predictions that money printing and quantitative easing would cripple the U.S. dollar.

Neither scenario played out.

Adjusted for inflation, gold took more than 25 years to recover its 1980 high. Its reputation as a “stable long-term store of value” looks a lot shakier when you zoom out.

Why Gold Is Rallying Now

The argument for gold today breaks into two themes: structural and speculative.

Structural drivers:

These shifts helped gold move from roughly 4% of global investment assets to 6% in two years — its highest level since 1986, according to Goldman Sachs.

Speculative drivers:
Gold’s price exploded higher after Fed Chair Jerome Powell hinted at a dovish turn in his Jackson Hole speech this August, signaling more focus on employment than inflation. Since then, the metal is up 28%.

But here’s the inconsistency: bond markets and the U.S. dollar aren’t signaling inflation risk. Inflation expectations have actually fallen. The dollar has stabilized. Even the S&P 500’s recent gains have concentrated in AI stocks — not inflation hedges.

Instead, the assets outperforming alongside gold have been speculative names:

That suggests gold may be riding the same liquidity wave as speculative equities, meme trades, and momentum bets.

As one observer put it: buyers may be more attracted to the rising price itself than to fears of imminent inflation.

Is “Insurance” Getting Too Expensive?

Sebastian Lyon, founder and chief investment officer of Troy Asset Management, said: “If I felt that Paul Volcker version two was going to be coming in to replace Jay Powell, that’s a good reason gold would fall.” Lyon still sees a long-term bull case and holds more than 10% of his fund in physical gold.

Long-term holders frame their bet around the “debasement trade” — the belief that heavily indebted governments will eventually favor inflation over austerity. That may prove right over the next decade, but the recent price action raises a critical question: has the risk actually increased as fast as gold’s price?

Bubble History: How Far Can It Go?

In 1980, gold briefly reached 22% of global investment portfolios at the peak of a true inflation crisis. Today it sits at roughly 6%. If we’re truly moving toward a new currency regime, gold could climb further. But history suggests that positioning alone doesn’t prevent a bust.

Key risks going forward:

Investor Takeaway

If you own gold as a hedge, the key question isn’t whether governments mismanage their currencies — they do that regularly. The real question is whether today’s buyers are managing risk or chasing a trend.

Here’s how to think about it:

Bull Case

Bear Case

The Most Expensive Insurance Policy?

Gold may still have room to run, especially if policymakers choose inflation over fiscal restraint. But the market is flashing signals that momentum and speculation, not fundamentals, are leading the latest leg of this rally.

Whether you see this as an insurance policy or a bubble depends on your answer to one question:

Has the world fundamentally changed or are investors once again paying peak prices for peace of mind?

If “this time is different” turns out to be wrong again, late buyers could find themselves holding the most expensive insurance policy in the market.


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Society
KEYWORDS: gold; inflation; speculation

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1 posted on 11/05/2025 9:47:21 AM PST by SeekAndFind
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To: SeekAndFind

the dollar has stabilized? perhaps when compared to other currencies one could say it sucks the least. But a dollar used to be worth 1/35 an ounce of gold. Now it’s worth about 1/4000 an ounce of gold. Gold hasn’t changed. The dollar is becoming worthless.


2 posted on 11/05/2025 9:56:45 AM PST by wny
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To: SeekAndFind

Gold is down. Silver is up again, though.
https://www.kitco.com/price/precious-metals


3 posted on 11/05/2025 10:01:40 AM PST by cuban leaf (u)
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To: SeekAndFind

Bkmk


4 posted on 11/05/2025 10:03:23 AM PST by sauropod
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To: SeekAndFind

Gold has always been a good hedge.

I’m a firm believer in a balanced portfolio and sometimes that means your hedges should be bigger (and sometimes smaller).

I think the mistake a lot of people make with gold is viewing it as a growth asset - yes, sometimes it *can* look that way, but that never works out in the long-term.

For the record? I’m bit deeper into gold now - and it’s always fun when a downside hedge actually performs well.

I do think we have some market valuation problems - despite being an AI believer, there’s absolutely a bubble and it’s gonna pop at some point. Bubbles always do.

If I knew the proper ratios? Well, I’d be sitting on my own island, sipping a cocktail.

I’ve been trickling some profits and upping my hedge - +5% or so... but, I never go all-in against capitalism.

The 87 Black Monday... dot com bubble... 2008 GFC bust.... Been through enough to know — a bad time is *always* coming.

What I’ve learned is to hold value, rotate out to hedges when you think the bubble pop is coming, but only the fool thinks it’s ever *OVER*. You ride out the inevitable crash and the inevitable bear and retain value.


5 posted on 11/05/2025 10:15:40 AM PST by Capn Hayek (Capital is not responsible for Labor's lack of planning)
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To: Capn Hayek

Great post.

Thank you.


6 posted on 11/05/2025 10:39:19 AM PST by unclebankster (Globalism is the last refuge of a scoundrel. )
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To: SeekAndFind
Back in the 70s I bought one (1) 1oz. Kreugerrand. $250.00

I sold it a couple years later for $400.00 and I thought I did good. Should’ve hung onto it…

7 posted on 11/05/2025 10:46:42 AM PST by telescope115 (Ad Astra, Ad Deum…)
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To: SeekAndFind
Adjusted for inflation, gold took more than 25 years to recover its 1980 high. Its reputation as a “stable long-term store of value” looks a lot shakier when you zoom out.

Nonsense. And yet over the last 25 years, gold has handily outperformed the S&P 500.

Screenshot-2025-11-05-at-1-46-39-PM

8 posted on 11/05/2025 10:48:08 AM PST by PGR88
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To: SeekAndFind

Until the country learns how to determine where the gold can work without inflating itself through mishandling, it ends up being a commodity in itself and nothing more than a product that can be sold on the shelf for more than the things around it are worth.

wy69


9 posted on 11/05/2025 10:56:03 AM PST by whitney69
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