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Gold Price Prediction: Analyst Warns of 2013 Crash Repeat – 24% Drop Already in Play

Gold has spent years climbing higher as inflation concerns, geopolitical tensions, and economic uncertainty pushed investors toward safe haven assets. That trend looked unstoppable for a long

AnonymousCryptoCompass newsroom
June 19, 2026
5 min read
NEWS
Gold Price Prediction: Analyst Warns of 2013 Crash Repeat – 24% Drop Already in Play
CryptoCompass editorial visual for markets coverage.

Gold has spent years climbing higher as inflation concerns, geopolitical tensions, and economic uncertainty pushed investors toward safe haven assets. That trend looked unstoppable for a long time. Recent price action tells a different story, and one analyst believes the warning signs look remarkably familiar.

Leni, known on X as @lenion, argues that the current gold price correction bears a striking resemblance to the decline that followed gold’s historic peak more than a decade ago. His comparison centers on the events that unfolded between 2011 and 2013, a period when many investors expected a temporary pullback before a much deeper decline unfolded.

That comparison has started a new debate around the future of the gold price. Is gold entering a prolonged correction, or is this simply another pause before higher levels eventually arrive?

Leni points to a sequence of events that closely matches the conditions that appeared before the major gold crash in 2013.

Gold reached an all-time high near $5,600 per ounce before entering a correction. Since the beginning of 2026, the gold price has already fallen about 24% from that peak. March also became the weakest month for gold since June 2013. That date carries importance because it marked the beginning of the most painful phase of the previous bear market.

The analyst argues that the pattern follows a familiar sequence. Gold rallied for years. An all-time high followed. Federal Reserve policy became restrictive, and ETF outflows increased. Market momentum weakened, and a deeper correction emerged afterward.

Profit taking appears to be one of the first warning signs. Gold benefited from years of demand driven by inflation concerns, geopolitical risks, and economic uncertainty. Once the all time high arrived, buying pressure began to cool and momentum started fading.

Federal Reserve policy remains another major factor. Leni notes that investors worried about tapering and rising real yields during the 2013 decline. Similar concerns exist today. Inflation remains elevated, the U.S. dollar has strengthened, and real yields have moved higher. Historically, those conditions have not favored gold.

Easing Geopolitical Risks And ETF Outflows Could Weigh On Gold Price

Another factor involves safe haven demand. Gold often attracts investors during periods of uncertainty. Recent easing of tensions involving Iran reduced some of that demand. Capital has gradually moved back toward risk assets in certain areas of the market.

ETF activity has also become an important signal. March recorded notable outflows from gold ETFs. Previous market cycles show that large ETF withdrawals sometimes appear when investor sentiment begins changing. Leni believes this development deserves close attention because similar patterns appeared during earlier corrections.

Central bank purchases continue to provide support for gold. Those purchases may reduce downside pressure. Leni argues they may not be enough to fully offset the impact of restrictive monetary policy if the broader macroeconomic environment remains unfavorable for gold.

His near-term concern focuses on the $4,100 to $4,200 range. That zone could provide support. The analyst believes it may only serve as a temporary stop if current economic conditions persist.

Long Term Gold Price Forecasts Continue Pointing Much Higher

Short-term weakness does not necessarily change the long-term outlook. Several major financial institutions continue projecting higher gold prices over the coming years despite current correction risks.

J.P. Morgan projects gold could reach between $6,000 and $6,300 per ounce during the 2026 to 2027 period. Goldman Sachs maintains a year-end target of $5,400 per ounce.

Those forecasts suggest that some analysts view the current gold price decline as part of a broader cycle instead of the beginning of a permanent downturn.

Read Also: Kiyosaki Predicts $35,000 Gold by 2035, Explains Why You Need Silver and Bitcoin Too

The outlook becomes even more ambitious beyond this decade. Yardeni Research has discussed the possibility of a gold supercycle that could eventually push gold beyond $10,000 per ounce. Other long-range projections place gold between $7,000 and $10,000 by 2030, depending on inflation trends, monetary policy, central bank demand, and global economic conditions.

Historical data offers another perspective. Gold has generated average annual returns of roughly 7% to 8% across extended periods. Applying that growth rate over multiple decades produces surprisingly large numbers.

Conservative compounding models point toward a gold price near $15,000 by 2040. Such projections assume steady appreciation instead of explosive growth.

That distinction matters because short-term corrections and long-term trends often tell different stories. Gold has experienced several major pullbacks throughout its history. Many of those declines looked severe at the time. Several were eventually followed by new highs years later.

FAQs

Why are gold prices falling?

Gold prices have retreated from their all-time highs due to a confluence of macroeconomic factors, including higher-than-expected US jobs reports, surging inflation, and elevated bond yields. The strengthening US dollar and shifting expectations for Federal Reserve interest rates have further reduced the appeal of non-yielding bullion.

Is gold a safe investment now?

Whether gold is “safe” depends entirely on your financial goals. As a wealth preserver and portfolio diversifier, it can be a prudent hedge against inflation and economic uncertainty. However, as a short-term growth asset, it is highly volatile and pays no dividends, making it speculative. 

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