The collapsing monetary system is driving investors towards gold, silver, and Bitcoin as safe havens to protect against inflation and economic instability.
Economic Collapse and Sound Money
The old monetary system is collapsing, with gold, silver, and Bitcoin emerging as lifeboats for investors seeking sound money alternatives to fiat currency.
A sovereign debt doom loop is creating a negative feedback cycle where rising interest rates increase the debt burden, leading to larger deficits and more bond sales, further exacerbating the problem.
Gold’s 55% increase in the last year signals a loss of confidence in sovereign currencies and governments’ ability to balance budgets without debasing the currency.
Federal Reserve Actions and Monetary Policy
The Fed’s primary tool is the money printer, which they will likely use to service the growing debt, leading to a “Big Print” in the next 6-12 months.
The Fed is creating creative ways to print money without calling it that, such as bailing out Silicon Valley Bank using the systematic risk exception instead of following Dodd-Frank rules.
The Fed’s softening stance on QT, reducing it from $25B/month to $5B, and potentially using MBS proceeds to buy Treasuries, acts as a backdoor form of QE to keep money in the system.
Global Economic Shifts
The dollar’s global dominance is waning as competing currencies emerge, like yuan for oil, leading to a multipolar world with a potential neutral reserve currency.
As fiat currencies fail, people will convert dollar savings into sound money like gold and Bitcoin to avoid melting value, a mass version of Gresham’s law.
Bitcoin and Digital Assets
Bitcoin, with its fixed supply of 21 million coins enforced by a digital algorithm, is a scarce digital form of gold that is easier to transfer and verify.
Bitcoin’s ETF approval in January 2024 and Trump’s embrace, including a proposed strategic Bitcoin reserve, signal growing recognition of digital assets’ importance.
Gold and China’s Strategy
China has made a bet on gold, claiming reserves of 3,000 tons but likely holding much more based on shipments and local mining.
The U.S. could potentially leapfrog China by adopting a Bitcoin standard, which is not as outrageous as it sounds given the current economic landscape.