On 21 January 1980, gold touched an intraday high of $850 an ounce. It was the climax of the most spectacular bull market in the metal's modern history — a more-than-twentyfold rise from the $35 of a decade earlier, driven by inflation, oil shocks, and geopolitical fear.
What makes 1980 pivotal is not just the peak but how long it stood. The $850 intraday spike is worth roughly $3,500 in today's money (BLS CPI), while the annual average that year — around $613 an ounce — equates to about $2,400 in inflation-adjusted terms. On that annual-average basis, gold's real value would not be surpassed until 2025, a 45-year wait that ranks as the longest real bear market in monetary history. Anyone who bought the top spent a working lifetime waiting to break even in purchasing-power terms.
What broke the mania was Fed Chairman Paul Volcker, who pushed interest rates toward 20% and strangled inflation — and with it, gold's appeal. The long descent that followed runs to the 1999 bottom. Test the 1980 entry yourself on the calculator — switch it to "real."
Key events of 1980
- 1980-01-21
The $850 peak
Gold reaches its inflation-adjusted record, a high that will stand for 45 years.
- 1980-03-01
Volcker’s squeeze
The Fed drives rates toward 20%; real yields soar and gold begins a long decline.