# Сопутствующие статьи по теме Gold

Новостной центр HTX предлагает последние статьи и углубленный анализ по "Gold", охватывающие рыночные тренды, новости проектов, развитие технологий и политику регулирования в криптоиндустрии.

Metrics Ventures: Why Are Gold, the Renminbi, and Bitcoin the Same Answer?

Metrics Ventures analyzes the shifting global monetary and geopolitical order, arguing that gold, the Chinese yuan, and Bitcoin are all responses to the same underlying trend: a loss of faith in the existing international system and governance structures. The article begins by noting the surge in gold demand, particularly from central banks, which signals a deeper repricing of sovereign currency credit and global governance effectiveness rather than mere inflation hedging. This sentiment was a key theme at the Davos forum, where leaders discussed the breakdown of the "rules-based international order." As trust in multilateral institutions wanes, nations are rationally shifting towards strategic autonomy and risk management, preparing for uncertainty rather than operating within old assumptions. This erosion of trust is penetrating financial markets. Sovereign debt and currencies are no longer just economic tools but are now discounted for a state's governance capability and political constraints. The core of the issue is identified as structural within the dollar-centric system, which requires the U.S. to run persistent deficits to supply the world with "risk-free" dollar assets. This imbalance was sustainable as long as dollar assets were seen as uniquely safe, but the weaponization of financial tools and declining governance trust is forcing a repricing. The piece contrasts the responses of two major surplus economies: Japan and China. Japan absorbed adjustment costs through currency appreciation and financial liberalization, leading to domestic stagnation and high debt. China, however, maintained policy autonomy through capital controls and managed exchange rate, using the space for internal transformation. This path is now led to a structural shift in demand for the yuan, driven by its role in trade and supply chains, making it a strategic option for countries seeking to diversify away from dollar dependency. The future is not seen as a simple swap of a dollar hegemony for a yuan one, but a move towards a multi-polar monetary system. In this environment, reserve asset logic changes. Gold’s resurgence is a defensive response to governance uncertainty, as it relies on no single nation's promise. Bitcoin is a long-term, non-sovereign option on a future monetary form, whose value may be realized later in this transition. In conclusion, the common answer of gold, yuan, and Bitcoin reflects a fundamental shift in asset valuation premises. The core question is no longer betting on which nation wins but on how to remain valid in a world where uncertainty is the constant and monetary credit itself is a risk to be hedged.

marsbit01/28 05:09

Metrics Ventures: Why Are Gold, the Renminbi, and Bitcoin the Same Answer?

marsbit01/28 05:09

January 28 Market Watch: Dollar Breaks Below 96, Fed Meeting Approaches

Dollar Index Falls Below 96, Hits Three-Month Low Amid Fed Meeting Anticipation On January 28, the dollar index dropped 0.84% to 96.219, falling below the 96 mark and hitting a three-month low. The decline is part of a broader weakening trend since early 2026, with a cumulative loss of nearly 7%. Former President Trump’s comments endorsing the dollar’s performance added further pressure. Markets are closely watching the upcoming Fed meeting, where rates are expected to remain unchanged at 3.50%–3.75%. However, attention is on Chair Powell’s stance amid political pressure and threats of a criminal investigation by the Justice Department. Structural issues underlie the dollar’s weakness: its share in global forex reserves has fallen below 60%, while gold’s share rose to 25.94%. Trump’s tariff policies are further eroding dollar credibility, signaling a shift away from dollar dominance. Gold held above $5,000, briefly surpassing $5,200, with central banks—including China’s—continuing to accumulate gold. Silver rose over 5%, exceeding $110/oz, though some funds halted subscriptions, suggesting overheating. Institutional views are mixed, with Citi bullish on silver and others cautious on short-term gold pressures. U.S. stocks were mixed: tech gains lifted the Nasdaq, but healthcare stocks plunged, dragging down the Dow. Market focus includes potential Fed leadership changes and government shutdown risks. Small caps are outperforming, reflecting a rotation away from high-value tech stocks amid AI profitability concerns. Crypto, meanwhile, struggled as capital flowed into traditional safe havens like gold and silver. The core dynamic remains a structural recalibration of dollar credibility. The Fed’s upcoming decision highlights a policy dilemma: cutting rates may spur inflation and dollar depreciation, while holding rates could harm the economy. Uncertainty prevails.

marsbit01/28 01:51

January 28 Market Watch: Dollar Breaks Below 96, Fed Meeting Approaches

marsbit01/28 01:51

Gold Breaks Through Stocks: The 1.45 Lifeline and the Truth About Your Shrinking Assets

Gold's Breakthrough vs. Stocks: The Critical 1.45 Level and the Truth About Your Shrinking Assets Analyst Benjamin Cowen highlights a critical financial indicator: the S&P 500 divided by the Gold price (SPX:GOLD), currently at 1.45. Historically, this ratio has signaled major market shifts when breached, preceding the Great Depression (1929), the 1970s stagflation (1973), and the Global Financial Crisis (2008). We are now at this pivotal level again. Despite nominal all-time highs in the S&P 500, when measured in gold, the index has fallen 46% over the past four years. This "Bleed" represents a period of sustained relative devaluation for risk assets like stocks and cryptocurrencies against gold, regardless of gold's own price movements. Cowen's analysis, based on mid-term election year cycles, projects a potential timeline: Gold may peak in Q1-Q2 2026, experience a significant correction in Q3-Q4 2026, and cryptocurrencies would likely bottom alongside it. This would pave the way for a new cycle in 2027-2028. Key observations include: * A shift to a gold-dominant market regime, not a simple rotation between assets. * Rising unemployment, particularly among new labor market entrants, signals economic deceleration. * Gold has already technically broken out against the S&P 500. * Altcoins are experiencing multi-layered devaluation against gold, bitcoin, and stocks. The crucial signal to watch is a monthly close of the SPX:GOLD ratio below 1.44. The core advice is to avoid being wedded to a single asset class and to adapt to the market's current structure, which favors hard assets over risk assets.

marsbit01/28 01:34

Gold Breaks Through Stocks: The 1.45 Lifeline and the Truth About Your Shrinking Assets

marsbit01/28 01:34

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