Behind the Gold's Pullback Lies a More Significant Issue: The Loosening of the Old System

Odaily星球日报Publicado a 2026-03-23Actualizado a 2026-03-23

Resumen

Gold's recent pullback has drawn superficial comparisons to the 1979 cycle, but the underlying global dynamics have fundamentally shifted. In 1979, gold fell due to extreme Fed rate hikes under Volcker and a renewed belief in U.S. credit stability, which attracted capital back to dollar assets. Today, the situation is inverted. The U.S. faces massive debt, uncontrolled deficits, and a financial system hypersensitive to interest rates. The critical change is the structural challenge to the dollar-centric system itself, particularly the petrodollar cycle. The ongoing Middle East conflict is not an isolated event but a self-reinforcing crisis that disrupts energy flows, elevates costs, and strains fiscal capacities—undermining the dollar’s role in global energy trade. This suggests that the recent gold sell-off is a short-term profit-taking move after a strong rally, rather than a loss of long-term value. The broader narrative is one of a deteriorating monetary order: the U.S. can no longer easily suppress inflation with high rates or assert global dominance as before. As the world reassesses the entire credit system, gold is poised to assume a new role as a hedge against systemic fragility.

Original | Odaily Planet Daily (@OdailyChina)

Author | Xiao Fei

Today, many bloggers are trying to use the events of 1979 as a rigid analogy to understand the recent consecutive pullbacks in gold.

The path does indeed look similar: Middle East conflict, rising oil prices, resurgent inflation, gold rising first and then falling. Simply comparing the K-line charts might seem sufficient to pontificate.

But upon closer examination, the operating logic of the entire world and macro expectations have undergone earth-shattering changes. Armchair strategizing by drawing K-lines is meaningless, but a comparative exploration of the underlying fundamentals can allow us to glimpse the bigger picture.

Learning from History: What Happened in 1979

The key to 1979 lies in two events following the Iranian Revolution.

The first event was the Fed drastically changing the entire game rules with extreme interest rate hikes. After Paul Volcker took office, he pushed interest rates all the way up to nearly 20%. At such interest rate levels, holding cash itself became the best asset, and gold, which yields no return, was systematically abandoned.

The second event was the global flow of funds back into the US credit system. The Cold War entered a period of detente, US-Soviet confrontation ceased to escalate continuously, and the US began moving towards unipolar dominance. Around 1982, the market was trading on the expectation of "the US re-stabilizing the global order." Funds returned to dollar-denominated assets, and gold lost its support.

Therefore, the rise and subsequent fall of gold back then was because soaring interest rates + strong enough US credit pushed the price down through the reconstruction of the authoritative system.

Today and Tomorrow: The System is Loosening

Applying the same logic today, the key variables are precisely the opposite; we are standing on the cliff on the other side of the mountain.

Today's reality is: US debt规模 has ballooned to its limit, the fiscal deficit is chronically out of control, the entire financial system is highly sensitive to interest rates, and not cutting rates already counts as tightening.

More noteworthy is the change in the underlying structure. The other reason for gold's decline back then was that global funds once again believed in the US.

But the nature of the Middle East conflict today is completely different. It is not only not a local event that can be quickly concluded through negotiation (even though Trump occasionally spouts nonsense), but it has even evolved into a self-reinforcing system. This conflict is cyclically producing results and having叠加 effects: energy is being hit, shipping is being disrupted, costs are being pushed higher, finances are being burdened—all participants are locked into this structure.

Furthermore, this conflict touches the most core part of the dollar system—energy. If US control in the Middle East declines, if oil is no longer stably priced in dollars, or if relevant countries begin to重新选择 settlement methods, then the problem is not just oil prices, but: the petrodollar cycle itself could be shaken.

Once this narrative develops fissures, the foundation of dollar credit is no longer solid. And the "gold as a hedge narrative" we've always understood is inherently a hedge against this very credit system.

This comparison becomes quite interesting.

Over forty years ago, gold pulled back because that system became stronger. Now, the decline is happening during a process where the system itself is being challenged and颠覆. Back then it was "capital flowing back," now it's "capital searching for a new anchor."

Today's gold is closer to a阶段性 release: the sharp rise has already priced in the conflict and inflation, short-term funds are starting to realize profits, and the market is entering a rebalancing phase.

Changing Variables

Returning to the beginning, comparing the 1979 gold K-line with today's is of no value, but the "changing variables" within it are worth pondering deeply.

In 1979, the US dollar was the answer. In 2026, the US dollar is also being repriced.

The logic of how conflict transmits to inflation via energy, how inflation affects interest rates, and how interest rates change asset pricing is already different. Today's world has become more absurd, more complex, long past the era where order could be re-stabilized by one extreme interest rate hike.

With conflict spillover, Trump's policy flip-flops, energy prices remaining high, and the US no longer having the ability to suppress inflation with interest rates, the world might reprice the entire credit system.

At that moment, gold will also assume a new role.

Preguntas relacionadas

QWhat were the two key events in 1979 that led to the decline in gold prices, according to the article?

AThe two key events were: 1) The Federal Reserve, under Paul Volcker, implemented extreme interest rate hikes, pushing rates to nearly 20%, making cash a more attractive asset than non-yielding gold. 2) Global capital flowed back into the U.S. credit system as the Cold War eased and the market began trading on the expectation of 'the U.S. re-stabilizing the global order.'

QHow does the current U.S. financial situation differ from that of 1979 in terms of its ability to control inflation with interest rates?

AToday, the U.S. national debt has ballooned to its limit, the fiscal deficit is chronically out of control, and the entire financial system is highly sensitive to interest rates. The article states that 'not raising rates is already considered tightening,' implying the U.S. no longer has the capacity to aggressively hike rates to suppress inflation as it did in 1979.

QWhat core part of the dollar system is being challenged by the current conflict in the Middle East, as mentioned in the article?

AThe current conflict is challenging the core of the dollar system: energy. If U.S. influence in the Middle East declines, if oil is no longer stably priced in U.S. dollars, or if relevant countries begin to choose alternative settlement methods, the petrodollar cycle itself could be shaken.

QWhat fundamental structural change does the article suggest is causing capital to 'look for a new anchor' today, as opposed to flowing back to the U.S.?

AThe article suggests the fundamental change is a crack in the narrative of U.S. dollar credit. The U.S.'s ability to control global order and stabilize the petrodollar system is being challenged, leading to a loss of confidence. Therefore, capital is no longer flowing back to U.S. credit but is instead searching for a new foundation or 'anchor' for value.

QAccording to the article, what new role might gold assume in the future financial system?

AThe article posits that if the world begins to 'reprice the entire credit system' due to sustained high energy prices, an inability to control inflation with interest rates, and a challenged U.S. dollar system, gold will assume a new role, likely as a more prominent hedge against systemic credit risk and a fundamental store of value outside the traditional financial system.

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