Why the current gold price is an indicator of distress ahead?

Sir Fully,
The other day you advised me not to read gobbledygook as I continue my search for the right macro indicator(s).

The Japanese yen weakness preceding its current strength was clearly manufactured by the Central Banks.
The move from 146.4 to 161.94 in just a matter of 4 months … how did it happen? Was a USD crash prevented? We know that rate cuts will cause a DXY decline.

The DXY just hit a 52-week low earlier this week. Had the yen hypothetically been strong during this time period, where would gold be now?

And now evidences from the trenches for the R word … recession:

https://finance.yahoo.com/quote/DG/

While the “geniuses” and the analysts scratch their heads … are we in a recession or not …
https://finance.yahoo.com/news/recession-forecasts-have-been-wrong-for-years-heres-why-a-perfect-indicator-doesnt-exist-090047128.html

https://x.com/texasrunnerDFW/status/1829161077449621984

https://www.msn.com/en-us/money/companies/toyota-truck-sales-plummet-as-dealers-enter-emergency-mode/ss-AA1pFpPi?ocid=msedgntp&pc=LCTS&cvid=f31343550dea4e84ab212122a5649421&ei=8#image=9

Some text from the last link:

“One Hell of a Recession Indicator”
©Image Credit: Car Questions Answered
People in the comments shared their thoughts: “Car prices are up 50 percent, my salary is up 2 percent. That creates a problem for consumers.”

Another commenter added: “Here is Toyota’s problem. The people who can afford to write a check for that truck are too financially savvy to buy a truck at that price, and the people who would finance it to buy it, are starting to get afraid of running up any more debt.”

One person said: “If Toyota is having issues selling, that’s one hell of a recession indicator”

GL