Gold has always been viewed as a refuge asset. During times of economic uncertainty, inflation, or geopolitical tension, investors shift capital into gold. Central banks accumulate it, and recently, China has been aggressively increasing its gold reserves.
This narrative fuels the belief that gold will continue rising. However, in supply and demand trading, I do not rely on fundamentals. I focus exclusively on price action and higher timeframe imbalances.
Gold is limited in supply, universally recognized, and historically trusted. That’s why investors use it as a form of protection during uncertainty. When fear rises, gold demand typically increases.
But here is the key distinction:
The reason for the move does not matter.
What matters is who is in control — demand or supply.
There is a well-known correlation between:
When gold rallies, silver stocks and mining shares often follow. This creates the illusion that correlation itself is a strategy.
It is not. Correlation is simply a reflection of the same higher timeframe imbalance affecting related assets.
The weekly demand imbalance around 4,548 took control and played out. Price reacted strongly, pushing gold higher and triggering movement in related gold stocks.
That movement was not caused by headlines or China’s buying activity. It was caused by demand being in control.
Now that this weekly demand has played out, the imbalance is no longer fresh. As demand gets consumed, the probability shifts.
Gold must continue to drop further at any moment because it’s over-extended.
If you are involved in:
You must always analyze the weekly and monthly imbalances first. Intraday price action reacts to higher timeframe control.
Most traders focus on 5-minute or 15-minute charts and completely ignore the weekly imbalance. That is why they get trapped.
Correlation works — until it stops working. Price moves because of imbalances between supply and demand. Everything else is noise.
If you want to learn to trade stocks, forex, or crypto consistently, you must master higher-timeframe supply and demand.
Trading is not about chasing moves. It is about patience.
The art of waiting separates professionals from retail traders.
And in gold, patience is everything.