Over the last thirty years, a peculiar gold signal has flashed three times.
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Each time, gold soared in price. The first time was back in the 2000s: the dot-com mania was nearing its peak, money was flooding into any and all tech stocks, and equity valuations were trading at nosebleed levels.
At the time, gold was despised by Wall Street.
Goldman Sachs called it "a 19th-century asset."
One of Merrill Lynch's top investment analysts said that it was only for "grandmothers and conspiracy theorists."
And two of America's leading economists at the time called it a "barren asset."
The second signal came in 2008, amidst the chaos of the financial crisis, gold prices dropped briefly below $800 an ounce…
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And finally, the third signal:
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