In the second half of 2025, international gold prices experienced significant fluctuations. Although there was a peak within the year, reaching a historical high, the prices subsequently fell back due to profit-taking and market sentiment fluctuations, presenting a pattern of "oscillation-oscillation-re-oscillation." However, even after the adjustment, the current gold prices remain far above the levels at the beginning of the year, overall staying within a high oscillation range, which continues to make gold favored by long-term bulls.
As mentioned above, the K-line chart displays price fluctuations through the opening/high/low/closing prices of each time period and is an important tool for technical analysis. Common patterns include:
During the gold fluctuation period, these patterns are particularly important as they may indicate a Rebound or a trend change.
Taking the recent gold price as an example - when the price approaches the support area (around 4150 USD/oz), if a long lower shadow or hammer candlestick appears, it often indicates that the decline has been rejected by buying pressure, which may lead to a rebound; conversely, if a long upper shadow or shooting star pattern appears at a high level, it may signal a short-term peak, and caution should be taken for a potential pullback in the future. Meanwhile, if the price breaks through the previous high (forming a new peak + closing price confirmation), it may open up a new round of upward space. Conversely, if it falls below an important support level and closes with an entity bearish candlestick, it may indicate a weakening trend.
The fluctuations in gold prices are not solely determined by the emotions of short-term traders; more fundamentally, they are influenced by factors such as supply and demand, risk aversion, and institutional demand.
Therefore, when assessing the future trend of gold, attention should also be paid to these fundamental changes.
In the face of the current volatile pattern, it is recommended that investors:
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