Not days. Not weeks. Think in years.

Back in 2009, gold was around $1,100.

By 2012, it climbed near $1,700.

Then… nothing.

From 2013 to 2018, it moved sideways.

No hype. No headlines. No excitement.

Most people lost interest.

And that’s usually when smart money starts paying attention.

In 2019, something shifted.

Gold started climbing again.

$1,500… then nearly $1,900 in 2020.

No explosive move.

Just quiet accumulation. Building pressure.

While the crowd chased faster gains elsewhere,

gold was positioning in silence.

Then came the breakout.

2023 → Broke $2,000

2024 → Shocked above $2,600

2025 → Pushed beyond $4,000

That kind of move isn’t random.

Retail alone doesn’t drive this.

This is bigger.

Central banks are increasing reserves.

Global debt is at record highs.

Currencies are losing purchasing power.

Gold doesn’t move like this without a reason.

It moves when the system is under pressure.

At $2,000, people called it expensive.

At $3,000, they laughed.

At $4,000, they said it’s a bubble.

Now the question is different:

Is $10,000 really impossible?

Or are we witnessing long-term repricing in real time?

Gold isn’t suddenly “expensive.”

What’s changing is the value of money.

Every cycle offers the same choice:

Position early and stay patient…

Or wait — and react emotionally later.

History doesn’t reward panic.

It rewards patience.

#writetoearn #XAU #PAXG $PAXG

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