Gold Is Getting Liquidated in a Market That Is Misreading the Endgame
- admin_ftp@b2544fd367
- March 23, 2026
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Takeaways by Axi Select
- Gold weakness reflects liquidation, rising real yields, and delayed physical demand, not a breakdown in the long term macro case
- The Fed put is likely closer to a 15 percent equity drawdown as markets play a larger role in the economic feedback loop than in past cycles
- Any resolution to recession risk ultimately leads to easier policy and currency expansion, setting the stage for renewed strength in gold
A Market That Is Misreading the Endgame
Gold is not breaking because the story is wrong; it is breaking because the market is trying to price discipline into a system that ultimately cannot sustain it. What you are seeing is not a collapse of the gold thesis; it is a collision among rate repricing, forced liquidation, and a misunderstood macro framework in real time.
Start with rates, because that is where the pressure begins. The market is still clinging to the idea that central banks can hike with impunity, as if this system can absorb higher rates without consequence, but every turn of the screw tightens a structure already stretched across debt, leverage, and asset prices, and when something finally gives it will not be subtle, it will be the moment policy shifts from discipline to damage control. We are not operating in a low-debt, high-flexibility world. We are operating in a balance-sheet-heavy system where tightening works quickly and breaks things quickly. So yes, real yields can push higher in the short term, and when they do, gold feels it. But that move is not the destination; it is the trigger.
The market is still flirting with a higher-for-longer narrative, but the cracks are already showing. Pushing easing expectations out toward 2027 feels less like a forecast and more like a stress test of how long the system can actually hold together at these levels. Because central banks can talk tough, but they cannot hold policy tight with impunity in a system this leveraged. The longer rates stay restrictive, the more pressure builds in credit, equities, and growth, and that is exactly the setup that eventually forces the pivot. This is why the endgame still points to cuts, not hikes, even if the path there gets messy.
At the same time, fear of a recession is starting to creep in, and this is where sequencing matters. In the early phase of a downturn, gold does not always rally. It often gets sold. Not because it loses its role, but because portfolios are being cut and liquidity is being raised. That is what a $6.3bn outflow from GLD represents. It is not rotation. It is liquidation. Gold is being treated as inventory, not insurance, because in this phase, cash is king.
Layer on top of that a physical market that is temporarily short-circuited. The traditional flow of gold from London to Asia via Dubai has hit a bottleneck, with the metal being dumped locally at a discount, key transit hubs disrupted, and regional Asia buyers sidelined. Demand has not disappeared; it has been delayed in transit. But markets do not wait for logistics to normalize. When the marginal buyer steps away at the same time paper supply hits the tape, the price takes the hit.
So you end up with a market that looks fundamentally wrong but trades heavy anyway. That is what happens when flow dominates structure.
But the bigger misread sits with policy.
The idea that gold should fall because central banks might tighten or sell reserves ignores how the modern monetary system actually functions. Policymakers of all stripes do not operate with infinite tolerance for instability. They respond to stress, and in this system, stress shows up fastest and loudest in financial conditions and equity markets.
And this is where the equity piece becomes critical.
The market still looks back to 2018 as the playbook, where it took roughly a 20 percent drawdown in equities to force a policy pivot. But I think that threshold is lower now, closer to 15 percent, because the stock market has become far more central to the economic feedback loop. (The S&P 500 is down just over 10 % from the 2025 record high, and 6300 should get tongues wagging ) It is no longer just a reflection of growth; it is a driver of it. It feeds directly into household wealth, consumer spending, corporate confidence, and ultimately political pressure. When equities fall hard, the wealth effect reverses quickly, feeding straight into slower demand, tighter credit, and rising recession risk.
That means the Fed does not need to wait for a full-scale collapse before reacting. Once equities are down in that 15 percent zone and financial conditions start to tighten aggressively, the pressure builds quickly. The system starts to wobble, and the tolerance for maintaining restrictive policy drops sharply. The Fed may talk tough, but it is not blind to the role the equity market plays in holding the entire structure together.
So while the market is currently pricing higher for longer, the path of least resistance once growth buckles is lower, not higher. In a debt-heavy, asset-dependent economy, central banks can live with inflation running a bit hot for longer. What they cannot tolerate is a disorderly unwind in the wealth machine. The consumer, on the other hand, will have to bite the bullet and pay more at the pump, because policymakers will tolerate that pain far longer than they will tolerate a full-scale crack in asset prices.
And that brings you back to gold.
Because once that pivot comes, once the first dove comes into view and the second confirms it, and yields begin to roll, policy shifts from restraint to support and the currency side of the equation takes over. The answer to recession in this system is not sustained tightening. It is liquidity. It is balance sheet expansion. It is more currency, not less.
That is the part the market is not fully pricing yet.
Right now gold is caught in the transition. It is being sold because it is liquid, because yields are rising, because physical demand is temporarily sidelined, and because the market is still clinging to a tightening narrative. But none of those forces are permanent.
When the equity market forces the policy pivot, when recession risk becomes reality, when liquidity returns and the physical pipes reopen, the same metal being sold for cash today becomes the asset that investors reach for tomorrow.
Gold is not failing. It is being liquidated in a market that is misreading the endgame.
I’m not saying back up the truck on Monday, but moments like this don’t wait for consensus. You either step in or you watch it go by.
Yields ripping like this isn’t stability, it’s strain.
When the system starts to creak, the Fed doesn’t debate, it reacts.