
Mike Larson | Editor-in-Chief
Gold is the ultimate hedge against global chaos. Or at least, thatâs what it has been historically. But during this Middle East crisis, it has been anything BUT rock-solid. The question isâŚwhy?
Check out the MoneyShow Chart of the Day, a weekly chart of the SPDR Gold Shares (GLD) going back a half decade. You can see the incredibly powerful bull market of the last few yearsâŚhow wildly overbought GLD got several weeks agoâŚand how the ETF has pulled back dramatically from its late-January high.
Gold: Why ISNâT it Thriving Here?

Source: StockCharts
Moreover, that decline accelerated after hostilities broke out in late February. Gold plunged 15% â losing value for a nine-day stretch at one point â after the bombs started falling in the Middle East.
So, whatâs gotten into gold? Here are my three answers...
1. The Technical Blow Off. Gold rose incredibly far, incredibly fast in late 2025. Then it experienced a wild, exuberant blow-off top in January. I donât care what asset youâre talking about. When you get that powerful a move, with that powerful a technical blow off, youâre going to get some ugly action afterward. Not to mention a lengthy period of consolidation.
2. The Radical Rate Reversal. It wasnât that long ago we were talking about more Federal Reserve rate CUTS in 2026. Now, markets are starting to price in potential rate HIKES. And this isnât a US-only thing. Itâs happening in several global markets, too.
Long-term yields have surged as well. Investors are worried that higher energy prices will fuel more inflation â while spiraling war-related costs will necessitate more government bond issuance. Since gold yields nothing, higher yields on other assets can increase competition for funds. That puts downward pressure on gold.
3. The Scramble for Cash. Look at ALL markets in March. Stocks have been selling off. Bonds have been selling off. Gold has been selling off. That smacks of derisking and deleveraging. Or in simple terms, a scramble to raise cash. Some central banks (like Turkey) are also reportedly considering liquidating gold holdings to bolster their cash reserves.
If youâre asking why your primary safe-haven asset isnât keeping you safe from losses, those are my three answers.
But I ALSO believe the long-term bull market remains intact. The forces that helped push gold to $3,000, then $4,000, then (briefly) $5,000 still look to be in place. So, my advice is simple. Maybe donât be in such a hurry to get rid of your gold.
In this double-header episode of the MoneyShow MoneyMasters Podcast, Deron Wagner, founder of Morpheus Trading Group, shares critical lessons on the "institutional edge" and how professional traders hunt retail stops. He also dives deeper into his most important mantra â "Trade what you see, not what you think." Meanwhile, Sam Ro, founder of TKer, explains why the market is currently facing "indigestion" as it processes the massive $600 billion AI capex boom.Â
Join Top MoneyShow Experts Thursday for a LIVE Stock Market Discussion!
Top MoneyShow contributors will join me on X (formerly Twitter) for a LIVE stock market discussion held in conjunction with our partner Wolf Financial. Join us online here at 4 pm Eastern â and get expert tips on how to trade this volatile market from Carley Garner, Craig OâSullivan, Steve Suminski, Deron Wagner, and Javier Paz.
SPY & QQQ: It's "Put Up or Shut Up" Time for Markets
đ TICKERS:Â QQQ, SPYThe markets campaign opened with strength but ended with attrition last week. The State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF (SPY) declined 2%, reflecting pressure at the index level. The Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ) fell 1.9%, while still holding relative leadership versus peers. Now, itâs put up or shut up time, writes Buff Dormeier, chief technical analyst at Kingsview Partners.
đ TICKER:Â FANG
In early January, WTI crude oil traded around $55 per barrel. As I write this, WTI oil is trading for $95 a barrel â up 70% from where the prices were at the start of the year. Diamondback Energy Inc. (FANG) is a stock to trade, notes Tim Plaehn, editor of The Dividend Hunter.
đď¸ đ 1 Consumer Stock to Buy Thatâs Up More Than 70% Over the Past Year. (Barchart)
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