TLDR
- Peter Schiff said gold has a 75% chance of setting a low this week that lasts for years.
- Peter Brandt replied that he agreed with Schiff and had cash waiting on the sidelines.
- Brandt asked which market categories looked best for redeploying capital.
- In another post, Brandt compared current market leadership with the 2008 setup.
- Replies debated Fed policy, long bond yields, and market breadth after Brandt’s chart post.
Peter Schiff said gold may be forming a lasting bottom this week. In posts shown on X on March 28, 2026, he gave that view 75% odds. Schiff has long favored gold in macro debates.
Peter Brandt backed the call soon after. He wrote, “I believe you are right,” and said he had cash to redeploy. Brandt is known for chart-based market calls.
Schiff puts focus on this week’s gold low
Schiff framed his call around immediate price action. He said this week’s low, or slightly lower, could last “for years to come.” That wording gave readers a clear time frame.
The post did not list a target price for gold. It also did not name a specific trade or product. That left the market thesis, not trade details, as the main point.
Brandt responded within hours and agreed with the view. He said he had “lots of cash on the sidelines.” He also asked which categories looked best for redeployment.
The exchange kept attention on timing and asset rotation. Both men focused on where capital could move next. That mattered because Brandt raised the question of where fresh money could go.
Brandt links the gold call to a wider market debate
In another post, Brandt compared current market action with 2008. He pointed to “MAGS vs. Dow” as a leadership contrast. The chart language pointed to market leadership, not a direct gold forecast.
Brandt asked whether a similar path was possible. He added that, if true, markets were “almost halfway home.” That line widened the conversation beyond gold.
Replies challenged parts of that comparison. One reply said the Fed backdrop now differs from 2008. Another said there was no bearish A-D Line divergence now.
Other replies pointed to a 30-year yield near 5%. Some users also said market breadth still looked weak. Those comments showed that not everyone accepted a straight 2008 parallel.
Interview post keeps veteran traders in the spotlight
Brandt also shared a James Roppel interview on the same day. He called Roppel “a really great investor.” He also told readers to watch minute seven.
Brandt said it was “neat” to be mentioned by trading peers. That post ran alongside his market comments and extended the thread’s reach. The thread image showed 23.5K views.
Roppel replied that he was “beyond Honored and Grateful.” Other users thanked Brandt for sharing the clip. Some also praised his market analysis and trading style.
Taken together, the posts linked gold, stocks, and liquidity in one discussion. For now, Schiff’s 75% gold call remains the clearest point. Traders will now watch whether this week’s low holds.





