🟡 Gold — Take a Moment and Look Back
Step back for a second.
Not days. Not weeks. Years.
In 2009, gold was near $1,096.
By 2012, it climbed close to $1,675.
Then something interesting happened.
From 2013 to 2018, gold moved sideways.
No big headlines.
No hype.
Most traders stopped paying attention.
But that’s usually when smart money starts watching closely.
Around 2019, momentum slowly returned.
Gold moved to $1,517, and by 2020 it reached nearly $1,898.
It wasn’t a sudden explosion.
It was slow pressure building in the background.
While many people were busy chasing fast crypto pumps, gold was quietly preparing for a bigger move.
Then the breakout came.
In 2023, gold crossed $2,000.
In 2024, it surprised the market above $2,600.
And by 2025, it pushed toward $4,300.
Moves like this rarely happen without a reason.
Central banks have been increasing gold reserves.
Global debt levels are rising.
Currencies are slowly losing purchasing power.
Gold usually moves like this when the financial system begins to feel pressure.
At $2,000, people said gold was expensive.
At $3,000, many laughed.
At $4,000, some called it a bubble.
But now the conversation is changing.
Is $10,000 gold really impossible?
Or are we witnessing a long-term repricing happening right in front of us?
Gold itself hasn’t suddenly become expensive.
What’s really changing is the value of money.
Every market cycle gives the same choice:
Stay patient and prepare early.
Or wait… and react when the crowd finally wakes up.
History usually rewards patience.
#writetoearn #XAU #PAXG $PAXG