Conclusion first: Gold, I still hold a bullish view. Recent macro movements are hard to explain with mere "coincidence." When key personnel arrangements, policy expectations, and the dollar's trend resonate simultaneously, it's often not emotion but changes in the game structure behind it. If the new Federal Reserve policy path leans toward greater independence and tighter credit expectations, the dollar's phase of strength will indeed put short-term pressure on gold. But such impacts are more about rhythm than direction. Looking at the bigger picture, global uncertainty has not decreased: geopolitical tensions, long-term debt issues, and declining marginal trust in sovereign credit. In this environment, gold, as an asset that does not rely on a single sovereign credit, is gradually being re-priced by the market in terms of its "monetary properties." This is not trading logic but a return to the asset's fundamental attributes. Often, the market's script isn't complicated: at the height of emotion, retail investors chase highs; when volatility hits, panic selling ensues; and genuine absorption often happens when everyone is least willing to hold. This transfer of chips has played out countless times in the precious metals market. But the reality is, no one can precisely predict whether the next move will accelerate upward or retrace to shake out weak hands. Since we can't catch the "perfect rhythm," the only choice is to adopt the "appropriate method": no leverage, phased allocation, increasing positions on dips—focusing on lowering the average cost rather than guessing tops or bottoms. Assets like gold are less about entry points and more about whether the holding logic holds up. Looking at the actions of central banks worldwide is even more straightforward. Official gold reserve increases are essentially long-term asset structure adjustments, not trading behaviors. These slow-moving variables often carry more directional significance than short-term capital flows. As for silver, it is not simply a "follow-the-rally" asset. On one hand, it absorbs the spillover from gold's safe-haven appeal; on the other, it has clear industrial attributes. Against the backdrop of electrification, semiconductor, and AI-related hardware expansion, the demand structure for highly conductive metals is changing. This puts silver in a relatively rare "dual logic resonance" phase—both a precious metal and an industrial resource. In this cycle, gold acts more like a "bottom anchor," while silver may be the more elastic side. Who benefits in the end will be revealed by time. #web3 #Gold #Investment

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