Gold's latest pullback may look like just another leg lower — but under the surface, the technical setup is starting to flash something far more interesting.

Source: TradingView

Momentum has now cracked to its weakest level in over a year, with the RSI (relative strength index) slipping into oversold territory for the first time since 2023.

That kind of reset doesn't happen often — and when it does, it tends to ripple across instruments like SPDR Gold Shares (NYSE:GLD) and gold miner funds such as VanEck Gold Miners ETF (NYSE:GDX).

Oversold Signal Returns

The last time gold hit similar RSI levels, the selloff didn't last long. Instead, it marked a turning point as sellers ran out of steam and buyers stepped back in.

This time, the move lower has been sharp and fast — the kind of decline that typically compresses positioning quickly. For traders, that raises a key question: is this capitulation, or just the beginning of a larger unwind?

That's because gold miners tend to act as a leveraged play on the metal itself. When gold stabilizes or rebounds, funds like GDX often move more aggressively, making this oversold signal especially relevant beyond just spot prices.

200-Day Line Becomes The Battleground

What makes this setup more compelling is where gold is finding support.

Prices have now pulled back toward the 200-day moving average — a long-term trendline that often acts as a technical "lifeline" in ongoing uptrends. Notably, the chart shows a sharp intraday rebound right around this level, suggesting that buyers are already defending it.

For ETFs like GLD, this level often defines trend continuation. For miners, it's even more critical — a hold here could set up a broader rebound across the gold trade, while a breakdown could accelerate downside in more volatile names.

That combination — oversold momentum and a test of major support — creates a classic inflection point.

If the 200-day moving average holds, this could turn into a textbook bounce setup, with gold stabilizing and potentially resuming its broader uptrend. But a decisive break below it would shift the narrative quickly, opening the door to a deeper correction.

For now, gold isn't just falling — it's testing whether this selloff has already gone too far.

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