Some of you have been asking why gold has been rising in value so sharply recently.
It is a fair question.
Gold is up sharply over the past year, while some of the assets that dominated the last cycle have stalled. Mega-cap tech has slowed. Crypto has struggled to regain momentum. Yet gold keeps pushing higher.
That leaves long-term investors facing a decision. Is this just another burst of enthusiasm, or is something more structural going on?
Before making a decision, longer-term context matters. This is the kind of shift we look at when thinking about where capital may flow next rather than where it has already been.
(You can see how we approach these transitions in our free report on the next phase of technology leadership.)
What has changed beneath the surface
Gold’s strength is not just about fear.
One of the biggest forces behind the move has been central banks. Over the past few years, official buyers have been adding gold at the fastest pace in decades. This is not speculative money. It is reserve management.
Central banks are choosing to hold an asset with no counterparty risk. One that cannot be printed. One that sits outside the financial system.
That tells you something about how policymakers view the next few years.
At the same time, volatility in gold has been lower than many investors expect. Liquidity has improved. And the market has been able to absorb steady buying without sharp pullbacks.
This is not how bubbles usually behave.
Why this looks different from past gold rallies
Previous gold rallies were often driven by short-term crises.
This one feels slower. More deliberate.
Gold is not competing with technology on growth. It is competing on reliability. In a world where valuations are high, debt levels are rising, and geopolitical lines are hardening, gold is being treated less like a trade and more like infrastructure.
That matters when investors are reassessing risk.
Crypto, by contrast, has struggled to deliver the same role. It remains volatile. It remains sentiment-driven. And despite wider adoption, it has not acted as a consistent hedge when conditions shift.
That gap is what many investors are reacting to.
What I’m watching
Gold is not risk-free.
If real interest rates rise sharply, gold can lose its appeal. If central bank buying slows, momentum could fade. And if inflation falls faster than expected, some of the urgency around hard assets may ease.
There is also the risk of crowding. When too many investors arrive late, returns tend to disappoint.
These risks matter. And they are worth acknowledging.
How I’m thinking about the next 12 to 24 months
I do not see gold as a replacement for productive assets like high-quality technology businesses.
But I do see it as a signal.
It suggests that markets are moving from pure growth-seeking to balance-seeking. From excitement to durability. From stories to structure.
That does not mean mega-cap tech stops working. It means selectivity matters more. Valuation matters more. And patience matters more.
If gold remains strong into 2026, it would tell me that investors are still prioritising protection alongside opportunity.
That is a very different backdrop from the last cycle.
Final thought
Gold’s rise is not a call to abandon equities.
It is a reminder that cycles change.
The best portfolios tend to adapt quietly, not dramatically. They recognise when the market’s priorities are shifting and adjust exposure thoughtfully rather than reactively.
That same mindset applies to technology. Leadership rarely stays concentrated forever.
We’ve explored this in more detail in a free research report that looks at seven technology stocks we believe are positioned to perform as the next phase of the cycle takes shape.
If you want to understand how we’re thinking about that transition, you can read the report here.
