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Gold Prices vs Oil Prices: How will the War with Iran Influence them
Below is a 50-FAQ article focused specifically on the correlation between gold prices and oil prices, with detailed answers, examples, text-based charts, graphs, and statistics. Core Data Snapshot Market factor Oil impact Gold impact Iran war escalation Bullish Bullish at first Strait of Hormuz disruption Strongly bullish Indirectly bullish Inflation shock Bullish oil Mixed for gold Higher interest rates Usually neutral/bearish oil demand Bearish gold Recession fear Bearish o

International Stacker
1 day ago7 min read


120-Year Timeline, Predictive Models & The Future of Gold Prices in Global Crises (1900–2035)- Part 3
🕰️ Full 120-Year Timeline: Gold Prices vs Global Crises 📊 Decade-by-Decade Breakdown (With Crisis Context) 1900–1914: Classical Gold Standard Stability Gold fixed at ~$20.67/oz Global currencies pegged to gold Inflation low and stable (~1–2%) 🧠 Interpretation: Gold = money itself, not an investment No volatility because price was legally fixed 1914–1918: World War I Gold convertibility suspended globally Massive wartime debt issuance 📊 Impact: Currency devaluation vs gold

International Stacker
7 days ago5 min read


Gold Prices and World Crises (1900–2026): A Data-Driven Analysis - Part 1
📉 Long-Term Gold Price Context (1915–2026) Before analyzing crises, we need to establish a foundational truth: Gold behaves differently depending on the monetary system in place. Key Structural Eras: Pre-1934: Gold Standard (fixed price) 1934–1971: Bretton Woods ($35/oz fixed) Post-1971: Free-floating gold market 2000–present: Financialization + central bank demand From 1934 to 1971, gold was fixed at $35/oz by law — meaning: No real “price movement” during crises Instead,

International Stacker
7 days ago5 min read


First Deep-Dive Into Gold & Silver Investing (“Stacking”)
1. What “Stacking” Really Means (Beyond the Surface) Stacking is not just “buying gold and silver.” That’s the beginner misunderstanding. In reality, stacking is a financial philosophy rooted in distrust of fiat systems, long-term wealth preservation, and monetary history. A stacker is not trying to “beat the market” in the short term. Instead, they are operating under a fundamentally different assumption: That fiat currency systems are inherently unstable over long periods o

International Stacker
Apr 2410 min read
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