Asia stocks climb tracking Wall St rally; Nikkei hits record high, China GDP beats
Takeaways by Axi Select
- Gold was not rejected; it was liquidated as portfolios raised dollars into an oil and rates market volatility shock
- The break lower was driven by Fed repricing, CTA selling, and cross-asset margin pressure, not by physical supply dynamics
- Holding the 200DMA and reclaiming the 100DMA suggests liquidation is fading, with $4970 now the key pivot where technical positioning can become fuel for further upside
Now Short Covering and Accumulation Collide
Gold did not break because the thesis broke. It broke because the system needed cash, and gold was the cleanest collateral to turn into dollars when the pressure hit the pipes.
The sequence was brutally simple once you strip out the noise. The Middle East shock did not send money into gold; it sent money into oil and the dollar. Oil lifted the inflation curve, inflation lifted yields, and yields rewired the Fed path in real time. The market stopped pricing cuts and started whispering higher for longer. That is the moment gold lost its footing, not because it stopped being a hedge, but because the cost of holding it surged against a rising dollar tide.
Once that macro hit, the technical structure did the rest. Gold slipped through levels that had been holding the entire positioning complex together. The moment those levels gave way, the systematic crowd did what it always does. CTAs flipped, stops triggered, and what began as a repricing turned into a cascade. Add in margin pressure from across the risk complex, and you had the classic playbook. When equities wobble and volatility spikes, portfolios do not ask what they want to sell, they sell what they can. Gold became the funding leg.
That is why the decline felt so violent and so wrong at the same time. It was not a rejection of gold; it was a liquidation driven by demand for liquidity. Even the chatter about Middle East selling fits that frame. Some local holders likely raised cash, but not because storage costs went up or because the long-term story changed. They sold Gold because in moments of stress, gold becomes the ATM. That flow exists, but it rides in the back seat. The driver was always the dollar and the rate curve.
Then came the turn.
After ten consecutive days of pressure, the market reached a point where there were simply fewer forced sellers remaining. The 200DMA held like a structural beam. That is where genuine money begins to move back in, not because they are chasing headlines, but because they recognise exhaustion when they see it. The more than 10 percent bounce in a single session was not a vote of confidence; it was the sound of shorts scrambling and liquidation demand running out of downside momentum.

Now the tape is shifting character. Pushing back above the 100DMA is not just a technical milestone; it is the market telling you the forced phase is likely behind us and the discretionary phase is returning. The next test sits at the 50DMA around $4970, which is exactly where my downside hedge against physical did its job. That was not luck; that was structure doing what structure is supposed to do when the market trades through stress rather than through narrative. It is also the kind of level that attracts fast money. A lot of traders likely leaned short into that zone, which turns it into a natural pivot rather than just a line on a chart. When a market flushes into a level like that and then snaps, it leaves positioning behind like footprints in wet sand. Those shorts do not disappear; they become fuel on the way back up if the tape keeps firming.
So is the pain over? The honest answer is that the worst of the mechanical selling looks to be done, but we are not out of the desert just yet. This is the transition zone where markets stop trading in panic and start testing conviction. If yields and the dollar hold steady on peace-dividend confirmation, gold can grind higher and squeeze those late shorts. If the macro pressure reasserts itself, the market can stall and chop, forcing weak hands out again before any cleaner trend emerges. The next leg will still be determined by whether the barrel continues to lean on the rate path.
You don’t wanna go in the desert" is a memorable line delivered by Val Kilmer in the 2004 thriller film Spartan. And that rings so true this week for gold investors.
The key shift is this. We are moving out of a market that was forced to sell gold to survive and into a market that can choose to own gold again. That is a very different tape. The first is about balance sheet stress. The second is about portfolio construction.
Gold did not fail in this episode. It did exactly what it always does in a liquidity squeeze. It got sold first, and we should all come back smarter. But just don’t get too greedy on this first recovery bone!!
