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Michael Oliver of Momentum Structural Analysis challenges the widespread belief that gold must drop when the stock market crashes, arguing this correlation is historically weak and unreliable. He points to 1987 as a prime example, where gold rose 7% during the crash, and notes that during the 2000-2002 bear market, there was no crash, only a prolonged decline.
By VBLMichael Oliver of Momentum Structural Analysis challenges the widespread belief that gold must drop when the stock market crashes, arguing this correlation is historically weak and unreliable. He points to 1987 as a prime example, where gold rose 7% during the crash, and notes that during the 2000-2002 bear market, there was no crash, only a prolonged decline.