Gold Tests 200-Day Moving Average: History Says Buy The Breakdown – VanEck Gold Miners ETF (ARCA:GDX), SP

Gold prices are testing one of the most closely watched levels in technical analysis: the 200-day moving average.
After a blistering rally that carried bullion to record highs at $5,600 earlier this year, the metal has spent recent weeks consolidating and is now hovering directly above its long-term trend line.
For many traders, a break below the 200-day moving average is viewed as a bearish signal. Recent history suggests the opposite may be true for gold.
Gold’s Previous 200-Day Average Breakdowns Became Buying Opportunities
The metal sits about 20% off the early-February peak above $5,600.
Data compiled from the last 10 occasions when gold fell below its 200-day moving average show that weakness has historically been followed by strong longer-term gains.
Across the full set of the last 10 episodes, forward returns strengthened the longer investors held: the average one-month change was essentially flat (−0.15%), but six months out, the average gain was 3.5% (70% positive), and one year out, the average was 8.4% with a 60% win rate and a return-to-volatility ratio of 0.57.
Table: Gold’s last 10 breakdown events of 200-day moving average
The signal sharpens after the 2021 chop. Filtering to the six most recent tests — from January 2022 through September 2023 — every single one was higher one year later.
Gold’s last six breaks below its 200-day moving average all produced positive returns one year later, generating an average gain of 17.3% and a median gain of 11.5%.
The takeaway: the 200-day line has repeatedly marked an opportunity rather than a top, even when the next few weeks stayed choppy.
The Sentiment Shift
“Gold is sitting right at its 200-day moving average,” Tavi Costa, founder of Azuria Capital, wrote in his latest note on Substack.
“The last time we were here turned out to be a great buying opportunity.”
Yet, the technical setup is only half the story.
A few months ago gold was one of the market’s most crowded longs; today, Costa says, it feels almost forgotten.
“I’m starting to get greedy while others are becoming fearful,” Costa said, riffing on Warren Buffett.
In a recent Kitco News interview, Costa framed the simultaneous selloff in gold and silver as a normal digestion of an outsized rally, not a broken thesis.
“The debasement of currencies and the hard-assets thesis remains as strong as it could be,” he said.
His core view — that fiscal deficits, compounding debt and currency debasement keep the structural bid under hard assets intact — has not changed, even as he flags rising populism and government equity stakes as fresh macro risks.
Photo: Shutterstock




