Gold Price History · The Free-Float Era

2013

The Great Correction

Gold’s worst year in three decades, as the Fed signaled the end of easy money and investors fled the metal.

Average price
$1,411/oz
In 2025 dollars
$1,950/oz
Change on the year
−15.4%
After inflation
−16.7%

2013 in context · real value, 1993–2025

200020102020 $1,950
Inflation-adjusted to 2025 dollars. See all 768 years →

2013 was a brutal year for gold — its sharpest annual decline in more than thirty years. The catalyst was the Federal Reserve's signal that it would begin "tapering" its bond purchases, the "taper tantrum" that sent real yields up and gold down. Investors fled gold-backed exchange-traded funds in record volumes, and the metal shed roughly a quarter of its value.

It was the steep middle leg of the correction from the 2011 record toward the 2015 bottom. For long-term holders it was painful; in hindsight, it was the market wringing out the excess of the post-crisis bull before the next chapter began.

Key events of 2013

  1. 2013-06-19

    The taper tantrum

    The Fed signals an end to QE; real yields jump and gold suffers its worst year since 1981.

What would $10,000 of gold in 2013 be worth today?

Run the numbers across gold, stocks, housing, and bonds — adjusted for inflation.

Calculate 2013 →

How gold did in 2013

Value at year-end of $10,000 invested on 1 January 2013.

Gold
$8,456 −15.4%
S&P 500 (total return)
$13,215 +32.1%
US housing
$11,073 +10.7%
Inflation (CPI)
$10,146 +1.5%

Annual-average basis. Gold: Officer & Williamson; S&P 500 & Treasuries: Damodaran (NYU); housing: Shiller; CPI: BLS. Methodology →

Related years

Sources. Gold price: Officer & Williamson, The Price of Gold, 1257–Present (annual average); inflation adjustment by US CPI (BLS / Officer & Williamson). Asset comparison from the calculator dataset. Figures are annual averages. Full methodology →