A Gold Crash Everyone Saw Coming Lures Bargain Hunters Worldwide

Gold bars are seen on display at a gold traders in Bangkok’s Chinatown.

As pictures of queues outside gold stores flooded social media over the past month, professional precious metals traders were getting increasingly nervous.

Gold is “an overcrowded trade that’s overextended by every technical metric,” Nicky Shiels, head of research at precious metals refiner MKS Pamp SA, wrote to clients on Oct. 6. On Monday, as prices soared to new record highs near $4,400 an ounce, Marc Loeffert, a trader at Heraeus Precious Metals, warned that the metal was “getting even more overbought.”

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The reckoning came this week. Gold prices plunged by as much as 6.3% on Tuesday, in the biggest drop since 2013, and held losses through Friday to close at $4,113.05 an ounce. In dollar terms, its $138.77 weekly drop was among the largest ever.

Was it a turning point in gold’s multiyear bull market, or just a dip? In Bangkok’s Chinatown, the nation’s gold trading hub, Sunisa Kodkasorn, a 57-year-old textile factory worker, had no doubt about the answer.

“Gold is the best investment,” she said. “We decided to gather all our money and come today because we knew prices had dropped.”

She’s not alone: from Singapore to the US, dealers told Bloomberg they had seen a rush of interest from people looking to buy gold as prices dropped this week. Kodkasorn’s attempt to buy the dip was stymied because the size of gold bar she could afford was sold out.

And another kind of gold rush is unfolding this weekend in Kyoto, where nearly one thousand professional gold traders, brokers and refiners are descending on Japan’s ancient capital for the largest annual precious metal conference, which begins on Sunday. The professionals — notwithstanding their caution in the recent run-up — are similarly enthused by the gold market: attendance at the conference is at a record high.

“Bull markets always need a healthy correction to weed out froth and ensure the cycle has duration,” Shiels, whose initial note came a fortnight before prices peaked, said this week. “Prices should consolidate and revert to a more measured bullish trajectory.”

The gold price peaked just above $4,381 an ounce toward the end of trading on Monday. What was unusual about what came next was that it was largely confined to the precious metals markets: other major markets, from equities to Treasuries to oil, were little moved on Tuesday as bullion slid.

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