Back in 2009, the airwaves were flooded with buyback commercials—Cash4Gold running Superbowl ads, companies scrambling to acquire precious metals from consumers. Meanwhile, the real power players were on the other side: central banks. Russia, India, China—the heavyweight institutions were accumulating aggressively.
Fast forward to 2025, and the script flipped entirely. Now every ad pushing across your screen is about buying gold—retailers hawking bars and coins with increasing desperation. The institutional bid has evaporated. What's actually happening? The cycle has rotated. Today's retail buyers aren't smart money; they're exit liquidity. The composition of demand shifted from structural accumulation by central banks to speculative retail interest. That's not a bullish signal—that's a warning sign of where we are in the cycle.
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MysteryBoxAddict
· 11h ago
Retail investors are truly the bagholders; institutions have already pulled out long ago.
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AllInAlice
· 11h ago
Oh my, it's another trap where retail investors are the bagholders. The central bank left long ago, and we're still here buying gold bars.
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SelfStaking
· 11h ago
Ha, it's the same old argument of "retail investors taking the fall." The central bank has already sold off, and we're still buying...
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RugPullSurvivor
· 11h ago
It's the same old trick again—institutions accumulating shares while retail investors buy in, just changing the asset and the year.
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MrDecoder
· 11h ago
Institutions retreat, retail investors enter, this is the taste of a top.
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SleepyArbCat
· 11h ago
Oh no... Are they going to start scamming newbies again?
Back in 2009, the airwaves were flooded with buyback commercials—Cash4Gold running Superbowl ads, companies scrambling to acquire precious metals from consumers. Meanwhile, the real power players were on the other side: central banks. Russia, India, China—the heavyweight institutions were accumulating aggressively.
Fast forward to 2025, and the script flipped entirely. Now every ad pushing across your screen is about buying gold—retailers hawking bars and coins with increasing desperation. The institutional bid has evaporated. What's actually happening? The cycle has rotated. Today's retail buyers aren't smart money; they're exit liquidity. The composition of demand shifted from structural accumulation by central banks to speculative retail interest. That's not a bullish signal—that's a warning sign of where we are in the cycle.