Gold’s Bull Market Has Ended and Now All Eyes Are on Bears

A wave of profit taking in the gold market has brought a three-year bull run to an end, but there’s little evidence yet that investors are putting on large-scale short positions in anticipation of further declines.

Investors have pulled nearly $18 billion of gold out of exchange-traded funds tracked by Bloomberg since prices topped out at all-time highs near $5,600 an ounce in January. The exodus helped to precipitate a rout that pushed gold into a bear market last month, with prices breaching $4,000 an ounce on multiple occasions.

The outflows were part of a broader unwind of bullish positioning that’s also sent a chill through futures markets and retail bazaars from Shanghai to New York. Bulls have pulled huge sums off the table, and while many are still optimistic about gold’s longer-term outlook, they’re on watch for a further deterioration in sentiment that could drive prices even lower.

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From the fleet-footed traders who dominate New York’s futures market to the central bankers whose steady purchases underpinned gold’s record-breaking rally, these are the investors to watch for signs that a more decisively bearish mood is taking hold.