Many people ask why we can't analyze gold and the NASDAQ together? Actually, the driving logic behind these two assets is fundamentally on different channels.



The issue with gold is quite straightforward—this wave of gains has been too rapid, nearly completing a ten-year increase in one go. The most probable next move is an oversold rebound, and other opportunities are unlikely to appear.

The situation with the NASDAQ is completely different. This index has its own rhythm, oscillating within a certain range every spring, then continuing to climb. If suddenly bad news hits, it could actually be a good buying opportunity.

Their intrinsic driving mechanisms are different, and their trading logic frameworks are also different. Analyzing them together will only lead to misconceptions.
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RadioShackKnightvip
· 2h ago
Gold has already completed a ten-year cycle in one go. Now we're just waiting for an oversold rebound. The Nasdaq is still playing its own rhythm game. These two can't really be watched together.
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LeverageAddictvip
· 2h ago
This wave of gold has indeed been overextended. The Nasdaq still has a chance. Don't get confused, or you'll really lose money.
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LiquidityOraclevip
· 2h ago
Gold has already priced in ten years of gains, and the Nasdaq has its own rhythm. This logic indeed makes sense. However, the biggest mistake retail investors make is forcing different things into the same framework, which results in losing money very quickly.
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LightningAllInHerovip
· 2h ago
This wave of gold is indeed crazy, with ten years of market trends all happening at once. Most likely, there will be a significant correction afterward. The Nasdaq, on the other hand, follows a pattern; the Spring Law is accurate every year. When negative news hits, it's actually an opportunity to buy cheap. You can't view it mixed; that's just asking for trouble.
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LiquidityWizardvip
· 2h ago
actually, mixing asset classes like this is literally asking to get rekt. gold's fundamentally in a different regime entirely—the correlation breakdown is statistically significant here. people see line go up and assume everything's correlated, which is... statistically illiterate tbh
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