Gold’s history is a roadmap to its future. My latest report, "The Massive Gold Stampede of the Next Decade: How Long, How High, and Why It’s Unstoppable!" opens with a critical insight in its first chapter, "Gold Breakouts: Higher and Longer Runs from Consolidation."
When gold escapes prolonged basing periods, it delivers massive, sustained gains. In the 1970s, a 37-year consolidation under Bretton Woods shattered, catapulting prices 2,329% from $35 to $850 over a decade, fueled by inflation and a collapsing dollar peg.
The 2000s saw a 20-year lull end post-9/11, driving gold 661% from $252 to $1,917 across 10+ years, propelled by quantitative easing and global uncertainty. Today, gold’s 13-year consolidation from 2011 to early 2024—trading between $1,050 and $1,900—has broken. At $3,000+ per ounce in 2025, the stage is set for a marathon run.
Historical patterns point to transformative potential. The 1970s averaged 200% annual gains in peak years; the 2000s delivered 25–30% yearly climbs at their strongest. Now, with a global investor base of 8.1 billion—more than twice the 1970s’ size—and instant information flows, this breakout could push prices to $6,000–$9,000 by the early 2030s, with upside to $12,000 if demand surges.
The data is clear: gold’s breakout DNA drives prolonged bull runs, and today’s catalysts—central bank hoarding, fiat erosion, geopolitical risks—amplify the momentum. This chapter lays bare the evidence, grounding the stampede in precedent.
The numbers don’t lie—consolidations breed breakouts, and breakouts redefine wealth. Gold’s history screams endurance: a decade in the 1970s, over 10 years in the 2000s, and now a 12–18-year horizon.
Read the report. Evaluate the evidence. Position yourself for what’s happening now and for what’s coming.
CONTINUED…
READ THE MASSIVE GOLD STAMPEDE OF THE NEXT DECADE HERE!
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